Example sentences of "[pers pn] [verb] go " in BNC.

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1 And yet , wrote Harsnet , it is this which excites me , this which makes me want to go on .
2 The river bottom was ridged sand , a difficult and unkind footing , that combined with the cold and the rush to make me want to go fast while forcing me to go slow .
3 It nearly killed them to acknowledge my existence and they only spoke in monosyllables when I was present , but the babble of sound which broke out every time I went out and closed the door behind me was enough to make me want to go rushing straight to Miss Malley to beg her to send me back to my friends .
4 It made me want to go and live in San Francisco . ’
5 ‘ That man makes me want to go and live in San Francisco , ’ said Mum .
6 But it was actually hearing Duane Allman that made me want to go for a powerful kind of electric sound .
7 When she returned , her soldier grunted , ‘ You 've made me want to go .
8 ‘ Watching you wee-wee made me want to go , too , ’ she giggled .
9 ‘ One of them asked to go to the lavatory .
10 And er erm they saw me on the you know television programme and they asked me to go go to the school and
11 There are many clinical features in common among these treponematoses and some of them appear to go through similar stages and periods of latency .
12 The cash it has taken from the likes of you and me has gone to cover its losses caused by firms going to the wall because of the recession .
13 Love and trust still exist , but because the emotional machinery that registers them has gone wrong , we do not feel as we used to .
14 The employees modify their expectations ; some of the trust between them has gone and with it , as Goffee noted , loyalty or commitment to the organization is reduced .
15 ‘ Now that opposition forces have overthrown Siad Barre , the single objective which united them has gone .
16 I have five children and not much money and not one of them has gone wrong and they all treat me with great respect .
17 He told me to try to go to Cookham Wood : in his words , ‘ There 's a better class of prisoner there .
18 Mr Waite , who was freed last November after five years in Lebanon , says on the ABC programme 20/20 : ‘ One day I asked to go to the bathroom .
19 I began to realise that life like this could not last for ever and so I asked to go back to the Cheshire Home for a holiday .
20 Then I asked to go straight back .
21 At the age of 42 I applied to go on a two-year business and finance course and finally , after a lot of readjustment , I have just had the results — pass with a few distinctions and merits thrown in .
22 But nor did I want to go out to work .
23 Why would I want to go and wander around on these featureless big sods at the weekend , when I could be rollicking along a precipice on a terrifying , craggy west-coast mountain ?
24 ‘ Why would I want to go there again ?
25 Says Eugene modestly , ‘ Kurt asked me did I want to go on , and I said ‘ Great ’ , but I shat myself .
26 But we still got the threat : I 'd be summonsed , and no way did I want to go to court .
27 When do n't I want to go to bed with her ?
28 Why on earth should I want to go after him ? ’
29 Did I want to go on being NORMAN BRITTON , C OF E ?
30 Do I want to go ?
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