Example sentences of "go through " in BNC.
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1 | So I asked if I might go through it again and try some of the ideas he talked about . |
2 | Or ‘ you do n't go through an experience ; an experience goes through you ’ ? |
3 | ‘ The redcoats will go through the houses like a fire ! |
4 | It 's safe to say that every child in every culture will go through a period of saying that the pencil which has been moved up is now longer or bigger or big now . |
5 | It is my experience that many students of English Literature with good A-level results dislike poetry , or at least feel baffled by it , and can go through a three-year degree course without this attitude being radically changed . |
6 | Whether or not the ultimate diagnosis is correct in every one or not , the answer is I do n't know because many children did n't go through the process that was needed . |
7 | I can go through the case notes and say maybe that parent could have been helped better , this child helped more . ’ |
8 | It 's a nice idea that in business or banking you can go through a period of ‘ consolidation ’ , but it seldom works out that way . |
9 | ‘ I really ca n't go through the day feeling like this . ’ |
10 | And I should n't go through your things . |
11 | But Mr Brazier gave an unhesitating ‘ yes ’ when asked if he would go through the experience again . |
12 | If it does go through it will provide a double benefit for the UK-based telecommunications group and is also likely to be seen as a significant plus for Hong Kong 's stock market . |
13 | To win approval , drugs must first go through a series of animal and clinical tests which are reviewed by government drug-approval agencies . |
14 | Supposing that the result of the investigation is satisfactory , and the purchase is completed , a subsequent purchaser must again go through the whole process ; the results of each investigation are practically thrown away for the future . |
15 | The person who is justified , the church which believes this , Christians who believe in a God who changes lives , can not just simply go through the motions . |
16 | He would go through the pain of divorce then if she really required it of him . |
17 | Almost all of these are now covered in a spurious black patina ( plate 8.3 ) ; indeed one can go through the sculpture galleries of the Greek and Roman Department and pick out the Payne Knight pieces from a distance , before checking against the registration number which invariably begins with 1824 . |
18 | If the material will go through the pump , it will generally go through everything else . |
19 | If the material will go through the pump , it will generally go through everything else . |
20 | Another , compiled in June , stated that no one believed any longer in an early end to the war in Russia , and that soldiers on leave had said they would not go through a second winter there . |
21 | An individual will go through the process just as we have outlined it already . |
22 | On the other hand , the question of aid to Malta had been decided beforehand , and did go through the National Assembly . |
23 | To change from clockwise to anticlockwise it must go through a third dimension to become a mirror image . |
24 | ‘ What do you think is more important : to protect the historical and nature sites , paying more for the roads , or let the roads go through the areas as originally planned ? ’ |
25 | ‘ If the injunction did go through it would have serious consequences for the National Trust nationally . |
26 | We might turn away from our own particular church — we might go through a period of not knowing what we believe in — we might change from being a Catholic to a Buddhist or from a Jehovah 's Witness to an Anglican ; but , no matter how many times we reject religion , we know it will never reject us . |
27 | We can go through them easily . |
28 | He could not go through it all again . |
29 | In 1940 he had been quite prepared , if need be , to serve in a dangerous capacity in the ranks because he felt he could be more useful in such a rôle at that critical moment in the country 's affairs , rather than go through the extra time and training there and then for a commission . |
30 | And fourth , having been caught out it would have been wiser to brazen it out immediately , as do the Israelis , rather than go through the tedium of Tricot 's inquiry . |