Example sentences of "[pron] go [adv] [to-vb] that the " in BNC.

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1 She goes on to say that the justices came to the view that the justice on the Friday had had no power to remand Mr. Bell in custody until the Monday , as the remand did not fall within the terms of section 7(5) of the Act of 1976 and that , accordingly , they no longer had any jurisdiction to hear the matter .
2 They use the 80860 as a vector processor for complementary co-operative processing , explains Parsys 's commercial director Ian Coburn , who goes on to stress that the company has no plans to use the Intel processor as a replacement for the delayed T9000 .
3 If we go on to admit that the latter are partially justified by appeal to the former , we reintroduce the circle of conditional justification whose sceptical consequence was that nothing was ever actually justified .
4 They go on to stress that the low level of resourcing can not take all the blame for this state of affairs , since the attitudes and policies of the schools themselves are crucially important .
5 They go on to say that the notion of ‘ intrinsic intentionality ’ makes no more empirical sense than does the notion of position in absolute space .
6 They go on to submit that the term should in principle be read in its narrower sense although this might leave what they describe — we think euphemistically — as a ‘ small lacuna ’ in the law .
7 They go on to argue that the 1970s saw a new phase in the world economy , a development they call the new international division of labour .
8 They go on to suggest that the characteristic British concern with the professional status of engineers is largely compensatory , and that the status of engineers is linked to the more general status of industry in the two countries .
9 They went on to urge that the national system should employ tests susceptible to a wide range of mode of presentation , operation and response .
10 However , they went on to comment that the assumed riskless rate of 6 per cent in Part 1 of the results may have been an over estimate , as Part II shows only the first 2 factors to be significant while the fifth factor lost all explanatory power .
11 It goes on to state that the cell had no electricity and no floor covering , the prisoners were allowed few clothes and they received only two meals a day , one consisting of a single very small momo ( steamed bun ) and the other of a small cup of wormy vegetables .
12 He goes on to state that the great coat charity is alive and is charged to Holborough Court Estate and was paid until his death by William Lee Esq .
13 He goes on to argue that the bourgeoisie have always used sections from within the ‘ dangerous classes ’ to control those who are overtly troublesome , perhaps following the maxim that ‘ it takes a thief to catch a thief ’ , when he argues : ‘ for one and a half centuries the bourgeoisie offered the following choices : you can go to prison or join the Army ; you can go to prison or go to the colonies ; you can go to prison or you can join the police ’ ( ibid. 23 ) .
14 He goes on to argue that the reality is different from the rhetoric .
15 He goes on to argue that the emergence of organised crime networks is bound to happen in a capitalist system .
16 He goes on to argue that the situational theory , the defence of established institutions , most closely meets these criteria .
17 He goes on to claim that the military are also involved .
18 He goes on to say that the main purpose of writing was to ‘ save from the wreck of time and the busy hand of man the best specimens of this mountain architecture , is one of the principal objects of the present publication …
19 He goes on to say that the question is also : ‘ Where are we ( if anywhere at all ) ? ’
20 Mentioning his education only in the most general terms , he goes on to say that the offices suitable for the likes of him appeared to be ( tedris , teaching ) and kada " here , the office of of which " one [ teaching ] is the intimate companion of poverty and need and the other [ kaza ] is unmitigated misfortune " .
21 He goes on to suggest that the amazing abilities of , say , Jesus and Elisha were ‘ natural capacities ’ which God took and ‘ used to a profitable end ’ .
22 He goes on to suggest that the ‘ mixture of bull-running , tipling and popery ’ was later used as a pretence by Edward VI to suppress the entire medieval guild system .
23 He went on to state that the Party would definitely affiliate to the Labour Party if accepted as a " revolutionary organisation " .
24 He went on to say that the Met failed in this respect , and it is certainly the case that in the late Sixties some policemen would have taken the evidence with them , later , with a conjuror 's flourish , producing sackfuls of cannabis from behind the furniture with cries of ‘ Hullo John !
25 He went on to say that the solutions are diversification , restraint , restructuring and strategic alliances .
26 Adjudication would be undertaken by a panel of distinguished doctors and psychiatrists and , to the delight of the press , he went on to say that the finals would be screened worldwide .
27 He went on to say that the use of non-book resources was one aspect in which hoped-for developments had not taken place , and this is typical of the awareness that , despite general satisfaction with the project , there were limits to its success .
28 He went on to say that the unanimous view of the High Court judges in Scotland was that the Scottish courts should remain the responsibility of the United Kingdom and not become the responsibility of the Scottish Assembly .
29 However , he went on to say that the CWS ’ remains wholly opposed to unrestricted Sunday trading and will continue to seek a sensible reform of the law on the basis of the REST proposals put forward by Keep Sunday Special Campaign . ’
30 However , he went on to say that the acceptance of the existence of Communist China did not mean that Taiwan had abandoned its " one-China policy " and that the country was prepared to wait for a positive response to its proposals for unification on the basis of liberal democratic policies .
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