Example sentences of "[subord] it do not go " in BNC.

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1 The first production versions of Audi 's Cabriolet were on show , although it does n't go on sale until April/May in Germany and the UK launch has been delayed until summer 1992 , when it 's expected to be priced at about £25,000 .
2 If it does n't go this way , then it will go that way .
3 I thought , ‘ I 've just got to say something , and if it does n't go down too well , we can edit it out afterwards ’ .
4 If it does n't go to the main group , it wo n't be and we may have to do something ourselves .
5 We 're the one 's who unashamedly say , Europe has to go forward if it does n't go backwards .
6 If there is no tuba , the part which would have been given to it will be allotted to two bassoons in unison ( if it does not go too low for them , of course ) .
7 The Prime Minister has again defended the Maastricht Treaty warning that Britain faces isolation in Europe if it does not go through .
8 ‘ But it only looked as if it did n't go in , ’ said Uncle Albert .
9 er present work , and so I mean , you , you , could say we 'll take it , er two or three hundred complaints from London , and buy time I suppose , erm to see if if if er work up here had picked up or natural wastage went or what ever , erm , if it did n't go up then , I mean in the long term , erm one could n't envisage keeping on with more staff than what 's thought to be a fairly generously assessed formula anyway , says we need .
10 Erm , the , all the arguments for and against organic dips have been considered this last nine months by the Veterinary Products Committee , and they 've come out with a report I think , that satisfies no one , because it does n't go either , either way in that respect at all , it 's called for more research and , and erm , development in that , in that sense .
11 Although I was baptized into the Methodist faith I used to prefer the church service because it did n't go on so long .
12 It was funny because it did n't go runny like mud .
13 Providing it does n't go bust first . ’
14 Purity became hegemonic in the early women 's movement , though it did not go entirely unchallenged .
15 In Jordan v. Burgoyne Lord Parker C.J. made the point that the expressions ‘ threatening , abusive or insulting ’ are all ‘ very strong words , ’ and Lord Reid in Brutus v. Cozens repeated the warning against too expansive a reading of the section , observing that ‘ vigorous and it may be distasteful or unmannerly speech or behaviour is permitted so long as it does not go beyond any of these limits . ’
16 As long as it does n't go black .
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