Example sentences of "[prep] [adj] [noun] go [adv prt] to " in BNC.

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1 I had for some reason gone up to M. Dupont 's room and was about to knock , but before doing so , as is my custom , I paused for a second to listen at the door .
2 and time for this reporter to go back to school .
3 He 'll often cut through this way to go over to Wellington into Crowthorne and walk all the way round .
4 After that students go off to vocational and on-the-job training .
5 The roots of parental involvement go back to the 1950s when primary schools began to have an identity of their own , an identity far removed from the old all-age elementary schools of pre-war years .
6 Everybody did 10 laps with the winners of each race going through to the next heat .
7 All independently of each other going round to the , well I say independently , but they obviously get fed a lot of information from head office where we have a telesales operation .
8 Sponsored by Bass , the tournament attracted a good entry of 18 pairs , with the winners and runners-up of each group going through to the semi-finals .
9 ‘ My love of English football goes back to 1973 when I was with Leigh .
10 She hastily returned it to its place , and in a state of some agitation went back to her car and sat there until she felt calm again .
11 There was a fight of some kind going on to my left ; all the people who a minute ago had been fleeing into the bush were just as suddenly pouring back .
12 The use of inspectors as a form of central supervision goes back to the Poor Law reform of 1834 .
13 Sure enough , there is observational evidence of such clusters going back to the 11 000 nebular objects listed in J. L. E. Dreyer 's New General Catalogue , in the 1890s , long before Hubble 's discovery of their true nature .
14 Exactly why is unclear as the origins of these vineyards go back to the days of the Knights Templars .
15 The first indisputable evidence of the use of nailed horseshoes goes back to the ninth century .
16 According to Bernard , as there was a long and well-established tradition of acceptability of anti-predestinarian theology going back to 1559 and beyond , the events of the 1630s did not represent any sea-change in the doctrinal position of the English church .
17 But about half of the 200,000 people who fall into either of those categories go on to full-time education and become entitled to student relief of the community charge .
18 The story of fluorescent lighting goes back to 1930 when research began at the GEC research laboratories in Wembley .
19 Some aspects of open enrolment go back to the 1980 Education Act .
20 A fast-growing proportion of young people go on to higher education ; and we want to see that proportion rise still further .
21 And that 's what upset us most about these people going back to work , the fact that a meeting had been taken a few months before in which everybody had voted for us to get the sack , and then all of a sudden they had been threatened and no vote was taken on whether we should stay out or go back , and they just dribbled back to , that really knocked us I think .
22 In the latter , emphasis was placed on practical skills such as technical drawing and woodwork , with some pupils going on to some form of technical college but with most leaving at 15 years of age and few if any achieving university entrance .
23 The cut for the weekend was made at 156 , with 41 players going through to the final two rounds .
24 However , Northern men are likely to agree that men do n't do enough to look after their children , and they support the idea of women with young children going out to work .
25 New College is proud of its academic record , with most students going on to further education .
26 And , excluding oil and other erratic items , the underlying deficit with non-EC countries went up to £711m in April .
27 Three dogs from each semi-final go through to Saturday 's final , when the track will have a special 2am late licence , with New Faces winner Stephen Lee Garden , the star attraction .
28 In the AAA Championships there were very tough qualifying conditions , only the first in each heat going through to the final .
29 By giving him a place in contemporary history going back to Tony Cragg , Anish Kapoor , Richard Deacon , the dealer enhances his credibility .
30 News from Parliament in these programmes goes out to huge audiences ; some 11 to 15 million people watch the main national news .
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