Example sentences of "go to [art] [noun sg] [prep] " in BNC.

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1 When you go to a banker for a loan and he asks you what security you can offer , you may think that banks exist to lend on good security .
2 A few go to a kind of " halfway house " , of which there should be many more , which usually consists of four or five small flatlets which girls either share or occupy on their own .
3 But I 'm you know that that could go this afternoon when I go to a couple of other appointments .
4 I go to a pub across the road to await the 10.19 .
5 Go to a pub in Liverpool Broadgreen and you might get a Militant video with your pint , courtesy of Terry Field .
6 and the whole band saw got ta to be resharpened he said and they go to a place in
7 Go to a printer with some ordinary business and he would refuse you , for he was working double tides — and quadruple rates — on railway maps and prospectuses .
8 We go to a solicitor for advice because he knows the law ; to a doctor because she can interpret symptoms .
9 He has no financial obligation towards you , unless you go to a lot of trouble to prove otherwise , and that could take years .
10 ‘ I go to a lot of fellowship meetings and I see a counsellor once a week which gives me the tools to handle life on a day-to-day basis . ’
11 I can tell you , a great many ghosts go to a lot of trouble , and do n't get any thanks for it .
12 This service is free if you go to a justice of the peace ) .
13 But my instructions for the lads have always been that if you go to a job for a lady particularly and then a man comes along and starts to get stroppy , you 'll have to explain to the lady you may have to leave it temporarily and go back .
14 If you stay on at school , or go to a college of further education , you are still entitled to placement through the Compact , provided you have achieved the Compact goals .
15 Er all of us go to a shop of some sort pretty well every day .
16 ’ unless such allegations go to a matter in issue ( including the credibility of the witness ) which is material to his lay client 's case and which appear to him to be supported by reasonable grounds . ’
17 ‘ If I ever go to a funeral in an out-of-the-way place , I always get pushed a discoloured glass of potheen .
18 Individual ants , misled in this way , fail to reach their holes but go to a point in the desert that is displaced by just the amount that the sun 's image was shifted by the mirror .
19 4 Go to a party in old clothes , then put on your best suit or dress after the party .
20 If I go to a match in Europe , I come back to a stack of videos and I can hardly be bothered .
21 The trick is to make the qualification time long enough so that the people who go to a club towards the end of their career and get large transfer bonuses do not qualify , but short enough for the players to feel that they will not have to wait half their lives to get theirs .
22 ‘ My uncles and must of the other Khans take such pains when they speak to me , and yet you go to no trouble at all .
23 We go to no end of trouble
24 I go to the quarter behind the Quai du Port , it 's old there and very poor .
25 In horror she saw the guerrilla 's hand go to the knife at his belt .
26 Then they go to the centre for special training and wait until a blind person needs them .
27 Experience at the Birmingham Money Advice Centre ( see Appendix III ) shows that — at least for the generally poor people who go to the Centre with money problems — mail order , check traders and other weekly callers such as tallymen are woven so closely into the fabric of daily ( or rather weekly ) life as to be more than just a possible buying choice .
28 Enter by the porter 's lodge ; if no one is there go to the door in the first courtyard on the left and someone is bound to come to your aid .
29 These are difficult questions , which go to the heart of the educational process , but the headings in Figure 1.1 suggest some answers .
30 ‘ I say , Miss Abbott , you certainly go to the heart of things — ’
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