Example sentences of "go to [art] [noun sg] [prep] " in BNC.
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1 | Well , yes , I mean Green politics do go to every area of life , obviously er we ca n't devolve the er environment from the rest of our activities . |
2 | And then there was a certain place where we would go to a breakfast on the train . |
3 | and so that money prizes are n't gon na go to a school like |
4 | In every case , the chair of the committee or subcommittee will go to a member of the majority party ; since the chair has very substantial power in directing how the business is conducted , occupancy of committee and subcommittee chairs is among the most significant roles within Congress . |
5 | PEG : I could go to a hotel for a bit . |
6 | At lunch time half a dozen of us would go to a pub at the corner of Fitzroy Street and Euston Road . |
7 | I mean you ca n't go to a pub without singing . |
8 | The system of private ownership , and the profits which were made by the captains , made it very probable that the command would go to a friend of the owner , or , since many of the ships were owned by partnerships , to one of the actual proprietors of the vessel . |
9 | Let me now go to a number of scriptural passages to see how the New Testament sees the death of Jesus . |
10 | The Opposition should go to a number of towns where bypasses have been built , which have been warmly welcomed . |
11 | People did not go to a hospital to be cured but to be killed or maimed . |
12 | It is not , er this evidence does not go to a matter of law er er and the duty but it matter of practice and my Lord what this case is dealing with is about what if , what is or should be the practice of a solicitors engaged in commercial conveyancing as to the advice that is given to clients and er my Lord the er commercial conveyancing is obviously a matter which particularly concerns . |
13 | This means that there is financial discrimination operating between those clients who use a law centre and those who may go to a solicitor with the same problem and who will then have to pay fees or a contribution towards the cost under the Legal Aid or Legal Advice schemes . |
14 | Now most of those one million people will go to a shop of some kind pretty well , pretty well every day in your life . |
15 | Before you used to have specialist machinery , but now you can go to a shop in your own town and pick up spares so a lot more people are going over . |
16 | ( This latter was used to good effect by the hard-up Gordon Comstock in Keep the Aspidistra Flying ; he would go to a party with a single cigarette in a packet and get free smokes all night long on the strength of it . ) |
17 | But you could go to a campsite for far less ! ’ |
18 | The sponsorship money will go to a group of charities who are already working in Romania trying to improve conditions for the village farming communities . |
19 | I wo n't go to a catalogue for mine . |
20 | Or William and Mary and say er can you do , they 're gon na go to an expert like him . |
21 | It is expected that the health budget for next year will be settled in the talks , but disputes over education and transport could go to an appeal to the Star Chamber of ministers chaired by Sir Geoffrey Howe . |
22 | In Canterbury you could go to an evening of wine and wisdom . |
23 | you could go to an area for the rest of your life and still not see any fighting . |
24 | So we 've therefore put some proposals through to the Commission of European Communities , which eventually will go to the Council of Ministers to extend Jet 's experimental programme into the end of 1996 . |
25 | Mrs. Jewkes , let the chariot go to the bottom of the elm walk . |
26 | But they 're worried that if they turn it down they could go to the bottom of the housing list . |
27 | Well I could n't go to the bottom of the table because of the Eeeuk ! |
28 | And then but it was seen as okay that the men could go to the pub after a funeral ? |
29 | Baldwin would go to the Ministry of Labour and there meet both the unions and the owners . |
30 | She returned his kiss , but declined firmly to join him at the Allied Steelmakers ' annual dinner ( carriages eleven-thirty ) , saying she would actually rather go to the cinema with a girlfriend , and tripped out of the office looking considerably less harassed than when she had arrived . |