Example sentences of "be [adj] go [adv prt] with " in BNC.
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1 | Scientists at the Met Office are prepared to go along with the US plan . |
2 | He accuses them of running up a hundred million pound debt during their years in control , and says the Tories are wrong to go along with them . |
3 | Revealing details of Iraq 's latest assurances delivered on March 20 , Rolf Ekeus , head of the joint UN and International Atomic Energy Agency ( IAEA ) special commission on Iraq , told a press conference in New York the same day that his commission was " satisfied there are undertakings that the Iraqis are willing to go along with the destruction [ of ] capabilities " which they had not previously agreed to destroy . |
4 | Whether he would have come to that conclusion if the building was betting-shop is an interesting thought , but we ‘ ve been delighted to go along with his judgement . |
5 | and they 're all going down with their little cards in their hands as they |
6 | Individuals who are reluctant to go along with the sentiments expressed in a collective discussion may be castigated as unduly kaingli , ‘ jealous ’ , or kongit , ‘ possessive ’ , of their spouses , an infringement of the legitimate autonomy of the latter . |
7 | While Judith , Rachel and Karen are sure their partners are happy to go along with the little alterations they try to make , Zelda says that interfering too much can prove to be very dangerous to a relationship . |
8 | The captains of the water industry are happy to go along with Brussels . |
9 | The RCM seemed to be prepared to go along with this , until they discovered that Willy was also in trouble with his employer , a Jeweller who caught the boy pocketing a silver cigarette case . |
10 | I 'd be prepared to go along with that as well . |
11 | ‘ Yes , this time I think I might be willing to go along with that , ’ Luke conceded drily , his gaze skimming the new lushness of her mouth . |
12 | I 'm foolish going along with you even this far . |
13 | We all know the great fiction that the Lab is independent of the police and I 'm happy to go along with it most of the time . |
14 | She was nearly sixteen ; if she refused to go and told her mother so herself , Anna , they reckoned , would not be able to go through with it . |
15 | Chris had written a letter to Tina Jelly in Aldershot saying that he still loved her and missed her a lot , but was sure that until he came home she would be able to go out with his mates from the Royal Signals . |
16 | And anyway if they were super models who would be able to go out with one so sad . |
17 | She … she wanted to provide me with something to be able to go off with Emma where he could n't get at her . |
18 | If you prefer some other way of defining complexity , I do n't care and I would be happy to go along with your definition for the sake of discussion . |
19 | Yes I , I , I 'm inclined to go along with that to some extent , I remember once er I think it was eighty four , because in eighty four or was it eighty four ? |
20 | It would have been irresponsible to go on with them having lost so much weight . ’ |
21 | As he had always succeeded in getting his own way , the workers had been inclined to go along with him , even when their instincts told them that he was wrong . |
22 | Some of the industry recognized that change was due and with various degrees of enthusiasm were prepared to go along with such proposals . |
23 | But while the Europeans were prepared to go along with an ultimatum to the Serbs that threatened bombing if there were more belligerency , they would not countenance lifting the arms embargo , which they believe would do more harm than good . |
24 | Stotland ( 1977 ) drew a portrait of the executive 's motives for being prepared to go along with corporate crime . |
25 | The largest companies told Mr Chiles they were willing to go along with his programme in the belief that they could compete . |
26 | It is possible to go on with the same therapist to deal with the problems which caused you to need the regression experience in the first place . |
27 | It will be necessary to see how far it is possible to go along with a strict criterion-referenced system or what kind of compromises may be worked out if such a system has advantages of motivating pupils and aiding changes in curriculum . |
28 | It is easier to go along with the false cheerfulness . |
29 | At 25 she is just about half his age , but she 's happy to go along with his old-fashioned — some would say chauvinistic — belief that a wife 's place is in the kitchen . |
30 | Pat saw just how true that was so the night that Ken was due to go out with one of his current close friends . |