Example sentences of "[conj] i could [adv] go [adv] " in BNC.

  Next page
No Sentence
1 Suddenly I realised that I could n't go on anymore .
2 Simply I had known that I could n't go on living with my mother .
3 That 's when I realised that I could n't go on with this free agent nonsense .
4 ‘ At it 's worst I just felt that I could n't go anywhere that I wanted to .
5 Did I look so obviously the sort to get into trouble that I could n't go about with circles under my eyes , or telephone a doctor , or throw up once in a while , without everyone immediately jumping to a single conclusion ?
6 Two days later they called me back and said that I could n't go back to Jamaica , but offered me a place in the group going to Thailand , which was leaving in February .
7 The next June , it rained all the time , and I could n't go out very often .
8 I was overtired and I could n't go off to sleep .
9 I felt as if I could not go on .
10 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 .
11 If I could just go back to my seat I 'll be okay .
12 If I could just go in — ’
13 Riding 's fun , certainly — or it would be , if I could sometimes go alone .
14 But I could not go there without checking up on our dearly loved Temple .
15 But I could n't go home in the dark ! ’
16 They turned round and said I was wasting the officers ' time , looking around searching for me , but I could n't go anywhere with all the doors locked .
17 All different people went in the meeting — the health visitor , the doctor , teachers — but I could n't go in .
18 He knows that we want to hear about his experience of Neighbours — ‘ They asked me to do Neighbours The Cyber Series , but I could n't go that far … feeling what it 's like to be in Jim Robinson 's shirt , what a waste of technology ’ — that we want tales of drugs and tripping , and an outsider 's observations on British cultural mistakes ( the shell suit ) .
19 I 'm unemployed at the moment , but I could never go back to being a bricklayer .
20 And er so that 's er I stopped on six months , being an orderly , because I could n't go back into tailoring , obviously , because er it might have aggravated it all again .
21 At fifteen , when I could legally go out to work , I got a Saturday job which paid for my clothes ( except my school uniform , which was part of the deal , somehow ) .
22 Though I could n't go so far as to say that service was included as all the waiters seemed interested in was getting the lights off so they could dance with Sorrel .
  Next page