Example sentences of "[adv] [adj] go [adv prt] [prep] " in BNC.
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1 | Anne 's job involved shift work , six o'clock until two , two o'clock until ten , and ten o'clock until six in the morning so she was rarely free to go out with Sarah . |
2 | Because there was so little going on with the band I arranged to give myself a bit of a holiday . |
3 | It would then be all right to go back to England and Glyn ? |
4 | With so much going on at the office , it is a wonder that Mr Lawrence has much time left for anything else . |
5 | There 's so much going on in Ibiza it 's easy to put together some really great trips . |
6 | She clearly had no time for Burley Woodhead when there was so much going on in Bradford . |
7 | ‘ I never knew there was so much going on in the world , ’ she said to John one day . |
8 | Why not visit the Amphitheatre and watch one of the exciting International Shows or perhaps you will find something else to do — there is so much going on from Fashion Shows to Jazz Festivals . |
9 | ‘ There was so much going on around him after the World Cup , I 'm not sure even he knew what was going on . |
10 | And as a business , politician and freemason , it was only natural to go off to the golf course on a Sunday . |
11 | Then what happened was the AIDS crisis became apparent at the point where I was ill and , suddenly , all these people that were right-on theoreticians were suddenly all going on about AIDS . |
12 | A young person officially comes of age at eighteen but , when so many go on to higher education and training after leaving school , even that does not mark the end of dependence on parents or state . |
13 | Not so many went out to work as they do now . ’ |
14 | Because , while being regressed , the patient is well aware of his or her present-day persona in addition to the previous one , Myra found it very distressing to think that she had been so happy to go along with all Hugh 's demands . |
15 | But the Greeks , though they enjoy buying the products of other people 's factories , are stubbornly reluctant to go in for factories themselves . |
16 | But evolution ploughed on remorselessly , enabling only the most adaptable to go on to the next stage . |
17 | You know sometimes the way forward is backward , there are no short cuts with god , if he 's leading along a certain path and were disobedient , there 's no way we can opt out of it and join the trail further along , he does n't allow it , its back to where we left it , that 's were we 've got ta get back to , we ca n't skip an experience , we ca n't miss any thing out , we 've got to go back to where we start , where we were when we left the trail and Naomi has to do just that to go back to Bethlehem , that 's the way forward for her , and you see because we all , we always find this if we are really children of god , then we can never ever be satisfied away from the will of god , there 's nothing else that meets our need , its god will or nothing , you know , when we know frustration in our lives , when we know sort of the , these annoyances and , and , and , and er sense of frustration there , its not because god is leaving us that way its invariably cos we have actually gone out of gods will because he 's will is not frustrated , its satisfying , can I just , it will only really be headings this morning , just leave us with three brief headings in this little incident that we 'll read or we , we wo n't read the whole passage but its , er in the remainder of the , or more or less the whole of the remainder of the first chapter tha that the cost was involved and then the choices that were made and then the commitment , the cost that was involved Naomi had to pay something , you see before she could return to Naomi she had to con , before Naomi sorry could return er to , to Bethlehem , she had to acknowledge she 'd done wrong , she had failed , she had sinned , she had to acknowledge she had made a mistake now in fairness to Naomi she did it and she excepted her responsibility , she did n't try and shift the blame on |
18 | But anyway this went on for weeks and weeks , and I kept on it down the lift shaft . |
19 | I hope I am still alive to go back to Palestine again . |
20 | She was continent and clean and was usually OK to go out by herself . |
21 | Lack of childcare provision means only 28% of British mums with under fives go out to work , compared with Denmark ( 44% ) , France and Belgium ( 50% ) . |
22 | It might be more prudent to go back to her bunk and hope he would go away when his hunger was satisfied . |
23 | Now I , they could , erm one thing that I found b b b b picked up from doing my own reading and studying was that it 's always good to go through with the customer step by step which is to a certain extent what we do do |
24 | ‘ Some of the residents are still able to go over to the shops . |
25 | Some are able to walk with a support when they are inside the Home but feel more secure going out in a wheelchair . |
26 | I knew I would never have the courage to go and ask for my job back after the baby was born , even if circumstances allowed it ; it would soon be filled again , and it 's always horrible to go back to a place where you 've been happy in your own little niche and find somebody else in it . |
27 | Some parents complain that they feel rather awkward going up to their child , when ( for example ) she is not behaving badly , in order to say , ‘ You are painting so nicely , I really feel pleased ’ . |
28 | They are afraid to stay in in case their doors are kicked in , but they are also afraid to go out in case their homes are done in while they are out . |
29 | Well like what are the band doing after practice , are they doing anything , they 're probably all going on to the Cutty Sark at Greenwich or something . |
30 | Marconi are also certain to go up after beating Pyestock ‘ K ’ and Ash ‘ K ’ and drawing with Frimley ‘ E ’ . |