Example sentences of "[vb mod] [adv] go on " in BNC.

  Next page
No Sentence
1 Maybe I should just go on doing this all night .
2 But when love fails us , we must still go on believing in it .
3 Out in the auditorium everything has to be checked every day for safety and there 's a non-stop maintenance programme because the show must always go on .
4 ‘ The show must always go on . ’
5 It follows naturally from the previous chapter that we should now go on to consider where sedimentation is actually taking place today .
6 Johnston , saddling his 48th winner of the year , should now go on to achieve his maiden half century , and does not mind whether it happens in the last four days of turf racing or on the all-weather .
7 The court must then go on to apply the fundamental principles in s1 of the Act before deciding whether or not to make a care or supervision order .
8 Choreographers should then go on to decide which style of dance would be most appropriate .
9 ‘ Then we 'll just go on watching it .
10 Right , next one is poison must get a move on cos we 're running a bit late so as we 're going to poisons later I 'll just go on to say here that there 's four ways poisons can get into the body .
11 ‘ So I 'll just go on , then , ’ he said .
12 do you think it 'll just go on there ?
13 and play it and it 'll just go on forever , and like my one just past the second song and it 's stuck
14 ‘ I 've got a meeting that 'll probably go on until one at least . ’
15 Do you know I if you ask Andrea about it , anything she 'll probably go on for ages , and ages , and ages , and ages !
16 Well there 's that one in the paper , I 'll have that one , that 'll probably go on longer that Tetley tea one mm
17 I 'll now go on with my statement for panel residents .
18 We 'll now go on to correspondence then Pat please .
19 But the quaint idea did occur to her that she might simply go on and on perfecting her role , delighting simply in her ability to deceive , and never , till the end , making any use of her deception .
20 Work in this area might usefully go on as part of a larger , more focused programme .
21 And her lips , opening to reply to his question , were long and mobile , eloquent even before she spoke , though she might sometimes go on to contradict what they had intimated .
22 If we accept Jakobson 's and Hymes ' , or any similar , categorization of language into a small number of macro-functions , we might then go on to subdivide each function and specify more delicate categories , or microfunctions .
23 It is well known that local reversals of movement occur and may possibly go on for a number of years .
24 It 's always the programmer — it 's very , very seldom the computer — and if I could just go on for a minute , I feel it 's essential that young children , particularly in the primary schools , get used to using hardware and programing , so that they will see the computer as part of their normal lives , like reading and writing and anything else they use .
25 Do you do you think erm your father when he started the shop in twenty six , would ever imagined that it could possibly go on to the the end of the century ?
26 We could now go on to attempt to explain the character of these institutions by citing their effect on leading capitalists — they are as they are partly because they encourage a belief which is functional in relation to the system as a whole .
27 Otherwise , Hibs could now go on their summer holidays and few would notice .
28 Yes , right to , to and , and you could even go on farther , but I do n't think I ever went any further I did n't have time .
29 It could well go on forever unless one of two things happens , unless everybody guards themselves against giving information away , which as a matter of practice many will do , and many probably wo n't , or secondly that some legislation is brought about to make this an offence , and to treat it seriously .
30 Material which starts out at regional may also go on to be used on the national networks .
  Next page