Example sentences of "[noun sg] [verb] go [prep] the " in BNC.

  Next page
No Sentence
1 IBM Corp has gone to the Distributed Computing Solutions arm of General Atomics Inc , San Diego for its UniTree file and storage management software ‘ for use and distribution on the entire line of IBM computers , ’ although it seems likely that it will be confined to running under Unix for now .
2 THE last hope has gone for the eight small rural schools facing closure in the south of the province .
3 You 'd certainly say the heart has gone from the land hereabouts , would n't you ? ’
4 The case has gone against the Pings , but it was a rude shock in a world of gentlemen .
5 The hon. Gentleman is also mistaken because he has ignored the fact that in the past three years alone , £10 million of Department of Trade and Industry money has gone to the assisted area in west Cornwall .
6 The power lead from the transformer has to go to the keyboard first and a short lead from here connects to the PCB .
7 And the Scots have every right to feel a ‘ wee bit peeved ’ at Montgomery Pipe Band , as this is the first time the overall championship trophy has gone outside the Highlands .
8 The value of dry foods in their various forms should not be overlooked as a great deal of ‘ state of the art ’ research has gone into the major manufacturers ' efforts to produce these high-quality nutritious foods .
9 20 pence for every card sold goes into the Molly Braithwaite Fund and with your help to date £70 has been raised for the above fund .
10 When the hearer hears goes to the window , he assumes it is ‘ the window ’ in that same ‘ living room ’ which has already been mentioned , and he assumes that the man ‘ goes to the window ’ on the same occasion , within minutes of the original setting ‘ sitting in the living room ’ .
11 The only requirements are patience , a willingness to learn and a readiness to let go of the habits of a lifetime .
12 The High Court in Glasgow heard that as the car started to go over the top of the steps , one of the youths pushing it shouted : ‘ There 's somebody down there . ’
13 Following football means going to the game .
14 Bringing that thought into consciousness means going through the classical stages of acknowledging the anger and the pain before finding acceptance .
15 On March 26 the South African Council of Churches issued a call for a national council of " leaders of the affected communities " to meet within a week , arguing that the violence had gone beyond the control of the ANC and Inkatha .
16 All the snow had gone from the tops and the sun was really warm .
17 Cecilia turned somewhat fearfully back and saw that the man and the bear had gone to the far end of the coach where a woman not much younger than herself sat alone .
18 She was moving to the great gates and before Maggie could react the white-gowned figure had gone around the corner and out of sight .
19 The West coast side have gone off the rails in recent weeks following successive defeats by Western and Hazlehead but as the cup is realistically their last chance of glory this term they will certainly not concede defeat from the want of effort .
20 Yer know that our ole boxin' Club 's gone down the drain since those new geezers took over .
21 I think football 's gone through the roof , it 's absolutely stupid how much there worth
22 Yeah , I do n't know , I do n't , I think religion 's gone out the door to be honest with you , I do n't think any religion with anyone really , erm , and is important in life that is used today , no , bloody do n't , I .
23 Dog squadron instructor Keith Waugh was born to be in the RAF and , after 11 satisfying years , he 's happy to say his family 's links with the force have gone to the dogs
24 The planned destruction of so much of Romania 's rural heritage seemed to go against the tenor of Ceauşescu 's out-spoken nationalism .
25 Dynafit has gone to the Swiss boot company Raichle and Kastle is currently for sale .
26 NME ca n't claim to be the first off the blocks with coverage of this splenetic musical bastard — that honour has to go to the now sadly defunct Sounds .
27 Our greatest joy is that the twenty-one-year-old wants to go into the car industry . ’
28 He accepts that every Special Constable has to go through the process of gaining the confidence of his regular colleagues .
29 What happens here is that if a white lady wants to go to the toilet and she 's working on a line , she does n't ask anyone 's permission , she just gets up — out she goes , powders her nose , has a cigarette , whatever they do — then comes back .
30 It means that they 're probably in this together and that if Scano 's boy risked going to the villa something must have gone badly wrong .
  Next page