Example sentences of "[adv] [verb] go [adv prt] [prep] the " in BNC.

  Next page
No Sentence
1 Do these all have to go up to the tower ? ’
2 Executives who commit corporate crime are not coerced into it , they do not necessarily have to go along with the advice or instructions of superiors .
3 The kettle sang quite quickly and meanwhile the stove , never entirely allowed to go out in the winter , had coughed into life .
4 Both were successful in their task , Phyllisia no longer has to go back to the West Indies and Celie was reunited with all her family .
5 Parties then with noise , just imagine going up to the door where there are fifty or sixty seething people in there .
6 She hated having to scan it in reverse rather than just rewind to go back to the same sequence the girl had been watching when she came in but Jezrael had n't thought to check the counter .
7 But it became clear that she would soon have to go out in the rain and get a bus to their sister convent .
8 But I felt guilty about her being in a Home … she just had to go in in the end — and I know it 's the best place , it 's safe and she has company all the time … ’
9 And this is a ph , like a photocopy , so what you 'll have is a nice printed version with Abbey Life blue , purely for you to get a feel of if you like , , and in this , we 're very quickly going to go through on the first sheet it will have activity and production and it will have your data there .
10 Well we 're still waiting to go back to the Manor Ground and catch up with Nick Harris .
11 Convenors of local committees are still encouraged to go along to the police and to discuss their plans for an event with them .
12 You 're preparing me to go out into the street , but I still have to go back to the system first .
13 I mean effectively , I always wanted to go back to the middle ages er , with , with the history books of English society .
14 However , the patient may also like to go out to the cinema , theatre , concert hall , pub or restaurant in the normal way .
15 The privatization bill will probably have to go back to the upper house , whatever happens in the Commons .
16 Sponge-fishing may also have gone on from the ports , though there is no direct evidence of it .
17 As you will see in the following chapters , a British Open-winning caddie will not only have his yardages at his fingertips , but will also have gone out at the crack of dawn measuring up again before each round after studying where all the pin positions are .
18 So Batty really has gone up in the world — from 4–3 against the ( old , great ) Liverpool at Elland Road two years ago to a 4–3 thriller against a club ninth in the fourth division .
19 For comparison , one really has to go back to the Renaissance , to someone like Giovanni Bellini , who travelled an enormous territory ; even to Giotto , the artist who Matisse said was the peak of his aspiration .
20 And of course you really , in order to get at the origins of history , you 've really got to go back to the , to the Greeks .
21 So that really means going on to the Labour resolutions and the Liberal resolutions
22 The first is that my tree really has become an old mate and I really do go out into the garden and hug it .
23 Now do go up to the others . ’
24 I now wish to go on to the order concerning access .
25 However , many carers may not have a great deal of energy left over for campaigning , and may simply want to go along to the group for support , advice and a break from usual responsibilities .
26 Edward had watched over her for hours , even refusing to go down to the lock with his friends for days , though he loved to play there .
27 ‘ We have even offered to go out with the police in their cars to help . ’
28 The fact that a sociologist was witnessing the interviews make it all the more certain they would be conducted with scrupulous care , but there was no way he would be given access to the extra-legal deals which may well have gone on outside the interview room or later during a prison visit for ‘ write-offs ’ .
29 ‘ Miers could not take the German prisoners on board his sub , and if he had left them to paddle ashore they would immediately have gone back into the German forces …
30 The duty on unleaded was simply allowed to go up by the rate of inflation .
  Next page