Example sentences of "[adj] [noun pl] go [adv] of " in BNC.

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1 I watched his shaking shoulders go out of the gate and disappear round the corner .
2 The answer lies in the British empire ; to be precise , a transit camp at Deolali , near Bombay , where British troops went out of their minds with boredom on their way to and from the service of the Raj .
3 For example , if your love life is thriving you can manage to maintain your diet , but as soon as there is an upset , or things are not going to smoothly , then your dietary resolutions go out of the window ?
4 Once these structures went out of use they became ready depositories for rubbish ( Jones 1979b ) , which can be difficult to distinguish from material reflecting the use of the building .
5 Since horse-drawn wagons went out of fashion , both gypsies and tinkers lead a curious , inverted life , buying and selling horses among themselves for sheer pleasure .
6 In all of Britain 's great cities , majestic terminals went out of use and lay for years rotting like gigantic beached whales in the noonday sun — Manchester Central , Liverpool Exchange , Birmingham Snow Hill , Glasgow St Enoch 's .
7 Traffic still very busy on all major routes going out of the city , it 's not as bad now , though as it was there the last time I spoke to you , but still , very very busy this evening .
8 If that is not so , why have so many ophthalmologists gone out of business ?
9 Ampney Crucis Mill is a long-term survivor for , in an age when many rural mills went out of business as a result of their comparative remoteness , coupled with competition from large steam-powered town mills , it still continued to grind corn .
10 As more and more shops go out of business , shoppers should be wary of putting down a cash deposit .
11 As we shall see the unequal power relations between parent companies and their subcontractors does mean that the burden of adjusting output in a recession can result in smaller firms going out of business .
12 As we shall see the unequal power relations between parent companies and their subcontractors does mean that the burden of adjusting output in a recession can result in smaller firms going out of business .
13 So all those things went out of the window which makes life easier .
14 BROTHERLY loves goes out of the window at Portman Road tomorrow for 90 minutes when Linighan meets Linighan with an FA Cup semi-final place at stake ( writes Dave Allard ) .
15 Read a story out , choose five children to go out of the room .
16 He says his customers would go further afield only if discounting was ferocious , and in such an event believes that prices would soon start going back up as one or more of the big chains went out of business .
17 The Bank of Japan is trying to force inefficient firms to go out of business .
18 In the event , no effort was needed : the early years of the Great War caused great damage to the Edinburgh printing trade , with several firms going out of business , others laying off workers or releasing them for other jobs since trade was so poor .
19 After the Cabinet reshuffle in July 1989 and her press office 's rubbishing of the significance of the title deputy prime minister for Geoffrey Howe , Conservative back-benchers went out of their way to show their support for Sir Geoffrey Howe in the House of Commons .
20 Thus , for example , left-wing authorities go out of their way to ban what seems to be racist matter , and right-wing authorities tend to be careful to exclude what may be regarded as homosexual literature .
21 One of the main reasons why new halfpennies went out of use was that too many were lost .
22 In later years , many of the rural and semi-rural mills went out of business as a result of competition from the large steam-powered mills built in and around Gloucester Docks .
23 They are so far unbeaten with two games to go ahead of the Bishop Auckland rink skipped by Derek Dowson .
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