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  1.  I went to Glasgow University and then I went down to London to work for a psychiatrist.
  2. I thought he'd gone to London.
  3. They left the house to go for a walk after tea.
  4. I went and had a wash.
  5. All proceeds are going to charity.
  6. He considered taking Mrs Burns to the pictures to see `Gone With The Wind'.
  7. She went to the wardrobe, chose a pair of shoes, put them on and leaned back in the chair.
  8. The government have made up their minds that they're going to win.
  9. You can't predict what these things are going to do.
  10. The man went up to the cat and started stroking it.
  11. `Would a young person be able to get a job in Europe?' `That would depend on which country he or she wanted to go to'.
  12. Going round Italy, one is struck by the number of opera houses there are.
  13. Here's the money, go and buy yourself a watch.
  14. Mrs Bixby went out, slamming the door behind her.
  15. Somebody else will have to go out there.
  16. Everything went according to plan.
  17. Nobody left, nobody went away.
  18. We are going to miss you in the university.
  19. We went on camel rides to the Pyramids.
  20. The loss of pressure caused the speeding car to go into a skid.
  21. They went to the most expensive restaurant in town.
  22. But you must come with us. It's the club to go to.
  23. I'm going to have the green one.
  24. I am going to walk up these steps towards you.
  25. Good evening. In this programme we are going to look at the way in which British music has developed in recent years.
  26. That idiot Antonio has gone and locked our cabin door.
  27. `I'm going to brush my teeth,' he said.
  28. Everything went on with a friendliness that was uncommon in such circles.
  29. They went to London for a few days.
  30. I was afraid to go home.
  31. As the days went by, Sita became less anxious.
  32. I went to buy a bag of chips.
  33. I went outside to throw a handful of bread to the birds.
  34. An appreciable portion of the university budget goes into the Community Services area.
  35. I'm going to ask you thirty questions.
  36. A few thousand cars have gone.
  37. That's going to take hundreds of years.
  38. Do you have to fill in hundreds of forms before you go?
  39. In the fall we two are going to England.
  40. They had to be the first to go.
  41. More than half of them have gone home.
  42. Half of the people went to private schools.
  43. The journey is going to take three quarters of an hour.
  44. ...people who didn't have the opportunity to go to university.
  45. He went back to his own room.
  46. Rudolph waved and went into the house.
  47. Rosamund went away for a few days.
  48. If I went away and left you in the flat, would you look after it?
  49. Jack went red.
  50. The world has gone crazy.
  51. He went on to become head of one of the company's largest divisions.
  52. He was absolutely the right man to go to Paris and negotiate.
  53. Mostly, they go unarmed.
  54. The children always went naked.
  55. Such men often go unrecognised in their lifetime.
  56. I think that on this occasion the guilty should go unpunished.
  57. He considered it his duty to go.
  58. Mrs Babcock had always longed to go to Ireland.
  59. We went on fighting the Incomes Policy for 18 months after that.
  60. She went on to talk about the political consequences.
  61. I regret to say rents went up.
  62. I went and fetched another glass.
  63. My father made me go for the interview.
  64. One of these days I am going to get myself elected to Parliament.
  65. He went to have a cavity filled and had an injection.
  66. I went to Glasgow University.
  67. Go away, all of you.
  68. He ought to have let me know he was going out.
  69. `Did you go through?'*`No, I didn't bother.'
  70. Was he going back to his home town?
  71. `You are going to do this, aren't you?'*`Yes.'
  72. What am I going to do without you?
  73. Which graph are you going to use?
  74. `I have to go to Germany.'*`When?'
  75. Where are you going?
  76. Where do you go to complain?
  77. Why does Amy want to go and see his grave?
  78. How are you going to get that?
  79. What are you going for?
  80. Let's go outside.
  81. Would you like to go to Ernie's for dinner?
  82. She never goes abroad.
  83. He never went to university.
  84. There's almost nowhere left to go.
  85. They were unhappy with the way things were going.
  86. Most people go to church only rarely.
  87. She may have gone already.
  88. I cannot go back.
  89. I can't go with you.
  90. They had come to believe that it not only must go on for ever but that it should.
  91. If I went back on the train, it'd be better.
  92. `I must go.'*`I suppose you must.'
  93. A man with a list would come round and say you could go off duty.
  94. The price of food will go up.
  95. It ought to get better as it goes along.
  96. You can go off duty now.
  97. She can go with you.
  98. We could go to any part of the island we wanted to.
  99. `I'll just go upstairs.'*`You will not.'
  100. You will go and get one of your parents immediately.
  101. We could go sledging up at Wilmington.
  102. We must go to the place, perhaps have a weekend there.
  103. Shall we go and see a film?
  104. Shall we go on to question number six?
  105. I shan't go back there.
  106. I couldn't possibly go out now.
  107. You used to be able to go to the doctor for that.
  108. The children are going to be fishermen or farmers.
  109. Life is going to be a bit easier from now on.
  110. I intend to go to Cannes for a month in August.
  111. I am going to talk to Boris.
  112. I'm going to show you our little school.
  113. It is important that you should know precisely what is going on.
  114. You'd better go.
  115. Need you go so soon?
  116. I wouldn't dare go to Europe.
  117. We didn't dare say that many of us would prefer to go home.
  118. go...going...went
  119. They would go on talking for hours.
  120. Our regular window cleaner went off to Canada last year.
  121. She had naturally assumed that once there was a theatre everybody would want to go.
  122. In the immense shed where we worked, something was always going wrong.
  123. You will stay at home and I shall go to your office.
  124. When peace is available, people will go for it.
  125. Our people will be going to their country more.
  126. Evans knows lots of people. He's going to help me. He's going to take me there.
  127. I'm going to explore the neighbourhood.
  128. Evans knows lots of people. He's going to help me. He's going to take me there.
  129. I think the Social Democrats are going to have some problems ahead of them.
  130. We're going to see a change in the law next year.
  131. I think we'll definitely be going next year.
  132. Her daughter was going to a summer camp tomorrow.
  133. I thought for a moment that she was going to cry.
  134. Your boss will now have no alternative but to go to his superiors and explain the situation.
  135. `I went to the doctor this morning,' she said.
  136. You'll be having a bath and going to the hairdresser's beforehand.
  137. I remember the next day at school going round asking the boys if they'd ever seen a ghost.
  138. Tired out, he had gone to bed early.
  139. We went quite late in the afternoon.
  140. We still don't know where we're going.
  141. On a warm, cloudy evening, Colin went down to the river.
  142. I went down and fetched her back at the weekend.
  143. Our train went at 2.25.
  144. You should go to church at Easter and Christmas.
  145. If you were to go on holiday on the continent in wintertime what sport could you take part in?
  146. Everybody went to church on Christmas Day.
  147. About nine o'clock he went out to the kitchen.
  148. ...to help keep their families going over the winter.
  149. City Music Hall is going to close down after Easter.
  150. She never goes abroad.
  151. I used to go in three mornings a week.
  152. He was going out four and sometimes five nights a week.
  153. In the last month of her pregnancy, we took to going out almost every evening.
  154. We'll go hunting every day.
  155. The next time I come here, I'm going to be better.
  156. Then of course you'll go with Parry. She's been your friend longer.
  157. Is he still thinking of going away to Italy for a month?
  158. They can go on making losses, year after year, without fearing that they will go bust.
  159. From the eighteenth century on, great private palaces went up.
  160. The chat shows goes out midnight through six a.m.
  161. I'm going to handle this my way.
  162. Obviously crime is going to be squeezed in a variety of ways.
  163. They would go on talking for hours.
  164. `I'm going to do it', I said quietly.
  165. They managed to keep his circulation going more successfully than we did.
  166. A child cools off quickest if the parents fade away and go about their business.
  167. Overall, the operation had gone very well.
  168. I just know I'm going to be late.
  169. I hope you can see slightly more clearly what is going on.
  170. He went to the back of the store.
  171. I went into the kitchen and began to make the dinner.
  172. The children have gone to school.
  173. I'm going with her to Australia.
  174. We went to the bottom of the field where a wagon stood half-loaded. We crawled underneath, between the wheels.
  175. Everywhere I went, people were angry or suspicious.
  176. We could go to Majorca if you want somewhere lively.
  177. Are you going somewhere special?
  178. Go north from Leicester Square up Wardour Street.
  179. `Where are you going?' demanded Miss Craig as Florrie rushed by.
  180. Soblen could have gone elsewhere.
  181. He went off somewhere for a shooting weekend.
  182. There was hardly anywhere to go.
  183. If you're going to behave like this, the best thing you can do is to go back to bed.
  184. Those men, when we get them into the police force, are going to be real heroes.
  185. `How's it all going?' Derek asked.
  186. `I'll go to him in a minute,' she thought.
  187. He didn't want to go.
  188. `Let's go and have a look at the swimming-pool,' she suggested.
  189. `When do you leave?'*`I should be gone now.'*`Well, good-bye, Hamo.'
  190. I must go and see Lynn, Marsha thought.
  191. `Let's go,' I whispered.
  192. *We have to go home,* she told him.
  193. I told him that nothing was going to happen to me.
  194. Henry said that he wanted to go home.
  195. Georgina said she was going to bed.
  196. He asked me where I was going.
  197. Someone asked me if the work was going well.
  198. He asked where I was going.
  199. Barbara suggested going to another coffee-house.
  200. I think it's going to rain.
  201. He said he really had to go back inside.
  202. Henry said that he wanted to go home.
  203. I explained to her that I had to go home.
  204. It emerged that, during the afternoon, she had gone home unwell.
  205. The decision to go had not been an easy one to make.
  206. I am confident that I shall be able to persuade them to go.
  207. It seems probable that the world can go on producing enough food for everyone.
  208. Whether I went twice or not doesn't matter.
  209. When he had gone, Valentina sighed.
  210. They were going by car because it was more comfortable.
  211. I want to see you for a few minutes at twelve o'clock, when you go to lunch.
  212. I look after the children while she goes to London.
  213. The next time I come here, I'm going to be better.
  214. Every time I go to that class I panic.
  215. Stay with me until I go.
  216. I deliberately didn't read the book before going to see the film.
  217. If I went back on the train it'd be cheaper.
  218. If they wanted to go out, they could always count on me to stay with the baby.
  219. It's late, and if I am to get any sleep I must go.
  220. If you are to escape, you must leave me and go on alone.
  221. Whether you go to a launderette or do your washing at home, the routine is the same.
  222. Wherever it is, you aren't going.
  223. As Celia had gone to school, it seemed a good time for Lady Ravenscroft to invite her sister to stay.
  224. I hope that nobody was so stupid as to go around saying those things.
  225. They obeyed him with such willingness that the strike went on for over a year.
  226. Everywhere I went, people were angry or suspicious.
  227. In Bali, wherever you go, you come across ceremonies.
  228. Nearly all the people I used to know have gone.
  229. ...that place I used to go to last term.
  230. ...a woman friend with whom Rose used to go for walks.
  231. There are other problems, which I don't propose to go into at the moment.
  232. I want to see you at 12 o'clock, when you go to your lunch.
  233. Later he went to New Zealand, where he did all sorts of jobs.
  234. At one point I made up my mind to go and talk to Uncle Sam. Then I changed my mind, realising that he could do nothing to help.
  235. The subject having been opened, he had to go on with it.
  236. He proceeded to light his pipe. That done, he put on his woollen scarf and went out.
  237. George having been carried to his cabin, Ash had gone up to the deserted deck.
  238. Anna had to go into town and she wanted to go to Bride Street.
  239. When she recognized Morris she went pale, then blushed.
  240. So don't go prying into my affairs or you'll get hurt.
  241. Neither Binta nor anyone else was going to speak.
  242. Mrs Roberts cooked, cleaned, mended, and went to meetings of the sewing club.
  243. The keeper came loping softly up the lane with the dog padding at his heels, and we watched them through the hedge as they went by.
  244. After you've set your goals, remember them by using a list. Anything that is worth doing should go on this list.
  245. In 1973 he went on a caravan holiday. At the beginning of this holiday he began to experience pain in his chest.
  246. Keep supplies of rice and spaghetti. Also, to go with the above, Parmesan cheese and tins of tomatoes.
  247. People will feel the need to be informed and they will go wherever they can to get this information.
  248. `Martin, what are you going to do?'*`That's a good question, Larry.'
  249. I never did go to Stratford, although I probably should have.
  250. `He's going to die, you see.'*`Die?'
  251. `Where are we going?*`Up the coast.'
  252. `Can I go swimming?'*`No, it's too cold.'
  253. It is really wonderful how the time has gone.
  254. Life is going to be a little easier in economic terms.
  255. They had arrived in style, carnations in their buttonholes; they went out in style too.
  256. Never feed your rabbit raw potatoes that have gone green*they contain a poison. Similarly, never feed it rhubarb leaves.
  257. Published in 1983, the book has since gone through six reprints.
  258. Go and see Terry Brown about it. Come back to me afterwards.
  259. We stayed fifteen miles from Bonar Bridge. And we went up the coast too.
  260. In particular, I'm going to concentrate on hydro-electricity.
  261. At eight o'clock I went down for my breakfast.
  262. What I'm going to do next I don't quite know.
  263. We've got to go, my dear.
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