Example sentences of "[adv] go to the [noun sg] " in BNC.
Next pageNo | Sentence |
---|---|
1 | He very rarely goes to the Rosemount wing . ’ |
2 | He could not live sanely , wholly , without her ; it was not enough to go to the playhouse , watch her tempting presence above him on the stage , without the least hope of possessing it . |
3 | Therefore , since the sellers ' breach had not been serious enough to go to the root of the contract , the buyers were entitled only to damages . |
4 | But Henry was hellbent on getting Finch up , hellbent enough to go to the analyst on his behalf . |
5 | Nobody who was lucky enough to go to the city 's Usher Hall can have forgotten the splendid Dies Irae . |
6 | I lost some weight and felt ill enough to go to the doctor who sent me to hospital in Northallerton . |
7 | Sunday was not much better ; Miss Huntley had not risen from her bed until one p.m. and had not left the flat until five , then only to go to the cinema . |
8 | Scouts had only to go to the North-east , the Birmingham area or any of the thickly populated districts to discover several players almost up to the top League standard . |
9 | Well next spring , in May of next year , we 're looking to put a trip together to go to the northwest of the country , to Old Trafford , obviously er Manchester United 's home ground , also to Anfield and also to a couple of er other places that are n't sort of sporty but I 'm sure will interest you . |
10 | If it is a view you are after , then better to go to the top of the Pic du Midi than remain down on the col , for from there the prospect has for long been famous , especially to the north over the plains and , on a good day , westward to the Atlantic . |
11 | ‘ This lift only goes to the penthouse , ’ he mocked as they came to a smooth halt . |
12 | ‘ You 're down to go to the dentist Friday , ’ Paul says . |
13 | Neil get out of his aircraft obviously to go to the telephone . |
14 | The tour 's prestige refereeing appointment , the Barbarians game at Twickenham on 25 November , has rightly gone to the world 's best , Clive Norling . |
15 | So er I , I b basically go to the office one day a week , that 's my admin day , and the rest , I , I tend to work within this area . |
16 | This man , who told Huy that he only went to the place to drink , never having had a problem when it came to finding a girl , was looking urgently for somebody to work on his paperbeating team as one of his men had died suddenly from river fever . |
17 | Many of the new firms that started were under-capitalised and so went to the wall , but the net number has increased by many hundreds of thousands since 1979 . |
18 | The issues raised there not only go to the root of the relationships between adults and children but also raise the issue of political control in general and in particular , the rights and duties of individuals to confront a sense of injustice . |
19 | ‘ They 've all gone to the funeral , ’ said Lydia . |
20 | Anyway , I suppose I 'd better go to the surgery , if I must see him . ’ |
21 | " I think I 'd better go to the loo , " she said , then looked at him . |
22 | ‘ He 'd better go to the zoo and live with the animals . |
23 | ‘ You 'd better go to the doctor , ’ said Apricot . |
24 | tablets are finished , I 'd better go to the doc |
25 | I 'd better go to the embassy to check if anything 's actually happened today . |
26 | First of all , they viewed the Marischal College , and at one o'clock went to the Town House , or Town Hall , where the magistrates waited to honour their distinguished visitor . |
27 | Well I mean the most of them will obviously go to the cash and er to the er supermarkets and pick it up . |
28 | Oxford 's Eddie Jordan finished his motor racing season by winning his first point of the year in Australia … but the gold medal tonight goes to the Laser boat building firm of Banbury their craft will be sailing in the the next Olympics in a class of its very own |
29 | ‘ The credit normally goes to the trainer on these occasions , ’ said Prescott . |
30 | Meanwhile Mrs Thatcher — shortly to go to the House of Lords — welcomed the election outcome : she said : ‘ It was a famous victory with a clear majority . |