Example sentences of "to go [adv prt] [conj] [verb] [pron] " in BNC.

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1 And it 's no good for her to go on and think she 's gon na get a little girl is it ?
2 The singular virtue of action-research is that things could not be left at that — it was necessary to go on and do something about it all .
3 What I did n't want to do at times was to overload , I wanted to start off with a time limit as we mean to go on and spread it out through the year and so I have put the important things which are to do with the quality system like internal quality audit erm , non- conformances , the corrective action , training and all stuff like that with an audit before and then things like contract print erm , I do n't think we are going to have any problems with I put those for after .
4 If the secretary had come back early , and if she answered , Lucy had decided to go in and bluff it out .
5 If I had my choice , I 'd rather be left to work something out myself ; instead of it all being set up and you just walk in and take measurements , go away and analyse them , you 'd have to go in and set it all up , then you 'd really learn something .
6 One wanted to go in and break it up , a second to stay back and let them go home .
7 You know , usually I got to go in and tuck her in and that .
8 ‘ You 're going to go in and face him .
9 You feel more confident do n't you in a group situation if you know exactly what people er er know or what they do n't know , cos there 's nothing worse is n't there than to go in and thinking they may already know this , I might be going in an teaching my grandmother to suck eggs here , I 'm not sure what they know about this .
10 McAllister wanted to go in and do something , anything , to stop such a harpy from hurting him .
11 It would be preposterous — and cruel besides — not to go in and comfort her a little .
12 What fools they , you say they were not to go in and possess it !
13 Well we 'll get the specialist to go in and see her and see what he makes of her , see if he can get her back on her feet .
14 The man came back to the telephone and said that if I was Linford Christie I was to go in and see them .
15 I mind of them when I was little , fine we used to go in and see them .
16 I used to go in and help them out at Christmas because they would be three may be four or five thousand turkeys right .
17 I do n't want to go in and have anyone see me .
18 You should have I 'm gon na have to go in and get me a a double bass like .
19 ‘ I thought , ‘ Either he 'll cook , or I 'll have to go in and get him ’ . ’
20 He was tempted to go in and get it over , but he had been away from his temporary headquarters for a long time and he did not even know if the body had bean recovered successfully .
21 group to go in and to spell them so they can talk to individual kids .
22 And we want you to go in and find them . ’
23 ‘ Do n't you think we ought to go along and support her ? ’
24 ‘ I intend to go along and hear what they have got to say , ’ he said .
25 Take Public Sector Economics and also taking a couple of lectures there , one on Targeting Social Security and er another lecture on An Inefficient on the Official Poverty Line , erm if you want er , well you can get the details from , from me afterwards but something like that could well be on the notice board if you want to go along and see him .
26 Now , Miss Gilberd , our valued teacher of the lower forms , will be in classroom 2B to talk to anybody who might wish to go along and see her ; Mr Makepeace will be in 4A ; Mr Farraday in the scientific laboratories , of course ; Mr Coffin in 5B … ’
27 I always knew how much he earned , because he used to give me his pay note and I 'd to go down and collect it .
28 Well , my gran had told me that she 'd gone down to see her friends who 'd get the Brown Lion after them by this time and er I decided to go down and tell them as I could see if they had n't got the radio on they would n't have known so as I walked from Burchells down Road I could see doors throwing open lights were coming on , people were coming out in the street and dancing and I got round down to the Brown Lion and it was all in darkness , and I rang the bell on the side door and I heard a few bumps and bangs and Mr who 'd kept it then came to the door , and I said do you know the war 's over and er he said oh no come on in that 's w now his son was a prisoner of war and they had been , he 'd continually tried to escape so much that he had his photograph taken in the Sunday paper , the , the Germans had had kept chaining him to the wall and other prisoners , other soldiers had got these photographs of him and smuggled them out and got them back to England , to the nearest papers , and er he he 'd said to my nan cos he knew she 'd always worked behind the bar , he said will you serve if I open the pub now , which was about eleven o'clock at night and she said yes of course , and the they opened the Brown Lion at about eleven o'clock at night in next to no time the place was full of people drinking , celebrating and of course the next day was really it .
29 His work prospered ; at the end of the first year he won the Literary Medal , and a cash prize which enabled him to go down and visit his mother .
30 Like there was this girl , she worked in the paper shop down the road , and there was this black kid who kept pestering her all the time , so we had to go down and sort him out .
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