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- I went to Glasgow University and then I went down to London to work for a psychiatrist.
- I thought he'd gone to London.
- They left the house to go for a walk after tea.
- I went and had a wash.
- All proceeds are going to charity.
- He considered taking Mrs Burns to the pictures to see `Gone With The Wind'.
- She went to the wardrobe, chose a pair of shoes, put them on and leaned back in the chair.
- The government have made up their minds that they're going to win.
- You can't predict what these things are going to do.
- The man went up to the cat and started stroking it.
- `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'.
- Going round Italy, one is struck by the number of opera houses there are.
- Here's the money, go and buy yourself a watch.
- Mrs Bixby went out, slamming the door behind her.
- Somebody else will have to go out there.
- Everything went according to plan.
- Nobody left, nobody went away.
- We are going to miss you in the university.
- We went on camel rides to the Pyramids.
- The loss of pressure caused the speeding car to go into a skid.
- They went to the most expensive restaurant in town.
- But you must come with us. It's the club to go to.
- I'm going to have the green one.
- I am going to walk up these steps towards you.
- Good evening. In this programme we are going to look at the way in which British music has developed in recent years.
- That idiot Antonio has gone and locked our cabin door.
- `I'm going to brush my teeth,' he said.
- Everything went on with a friendliness that was uncommon in such circles.
- They went to London for a few days.
- I was afraid to go home.
- As the days went by, Sita became less anxious.
- I went to buy a bag of chips.
- I went outside to throw a handful of bread to the birds.
- An appreciable portion of the university budget goes into the Community Services area.
- I'm going to ask you thirty questions.
- A few thousand cars have gone.
- That's going to take hundreds of years.
- Do you have to fill in hundreds of forms before you go?
- In the fall we two are going to England.
- They had to be the first to go.
- More than half of them have gone home.
- Half of the people went to private schools.
- The journey is going to take three quarters of an hour.
- ...people who didn't have the opportunity to go to university.
- He went back to his own room.
- Rudolph waved and went into the house.
- Rosamund went away for a few days.
- If I went away and left you in the flat, would you look after it?
- Jack went red.
- The world has gone crazy.
- He went on to become head of one of the company's largest divisions.
- He was absolutely the right man to go to Paris and negotiate.
- Mostly, they go unarmed.
- The children always went naked.
- Such men often go unrecognised in their lifetime.
- I think that on this occasion the guilty should go unpunished.
- He considered it his duty to go.
- Mrs Babcock had always longed to go to Ireland.
- We went on fighting the Incomes Policy for 18 months after that.
- She went on to talk about the political consequences.
- I regret to say rents went up.
- I went and fetched another glass.
- My father made me go for the interview.
- One of these days I am going to get myself elected to Parliament.
- He went to have a cavity filled and had an injection.
- I went to Glasgow University.
- Go away, all of you.
- He ought to have let me know he was going out.
- `Did you go through?'*`No, I didn't bother.'
- Was he going back to his home town?
- `You are going to do this, aren't you?'*`Yes.'
- What am I going to do without you?
- Which graph are you going to use?
- `I have to go to Germany.'*`When?'
- Where are you going?
- Where do you go to complain?
- Why does Amy want to go and see his grave?
- How are you going to get that?
- What are you going for?
- Let's go outside.
- Would you like to go to Ernie's for dinner?
- She never goes abroad.
- He never went to university.
- There's almost nowhere left to go.
- They were unhappy with the way things were going.
- Most people go to church only rarely.
- She may have gone already.
- I cannot go back.
- I can't go with you.
- They had come to believe that it not only must go on for ever but that it should.
- If I went back on the train, it'd be better.
- `I must go.'*`I suppose you must.'
- A man with a list would come round and say you could go off duty.
- The price of food will go up.
- It ought to get better as it goes along.
- You can go off duty now.
- She can go with you.
- We could go to any part of the island we wanted to.
- `I'll just go upstairs.'*`You will not.'
- You will go and get one of your parents immediately.
- We could go sledging up at Wilmington.
- We must go to the place, perhaps have a weekend there.
- Shall we go and see a film?
- Shall we go on to question number six?
- I shan't go back there.
- I couldn't possibly go out now.
- You used to be able to go to the doctor for that.
- The children are going to be fishermen or farmers.
- Life is going to be a bit easier from now on.
- I intend to go to Cannes for a month in August.
- I am going to talk to Boris.
- I'm going to show you our little school.
- It is important that you should know precisely what is going on.
- You'd better go.
- Need you go so soon?
- I wouldn't dare go to Europe.
- We didn't dare say that many of us would prefer to go home.
- go...going...went
- They would go on talking for hours.
- Our regular window cleaner went off to Canada last year.
- She had naturally assumed that once there was a theatre everybody would want to go.
- In the immense shed where we worked, something was always going wrong.
- You will stay at home and I shall go to your office.
- When peace is available, people will go for it.
- Our people will be going to their country more.
- Evans knows lots of people. He's going to help me. He's going to take me there.
- I'm going to explore the neighbourhood.
- Evans knows lots of people. He's going to help me. He's going to take me there.
- I think the Social Democrats are going to have some problems ahead of them.
- We're going to see a change in the law next year.
- I think we'll definitely be going next year.
- Her daughter was going to a summer camp tomorrow.
- I thought for a moment that she was going to cry.
- Your boss will now have no alternative but to go to his superiors and explain the situation.
- `I went to the doctor this morning,' she said.
- You'll be having a bath and going to the hairdresser's beforehand.
- I remember the next day at school going round asking the boys if they'd ever seen a ghost.
- Tired out, he had gone to bed early.
- We went quite late in the afternoon.
- We still don't know where we're going.
- On a warm, cloudy evening, Colin went down to the river.
- I went down and fetched her back at the weekend.
- Our train went at 2.25.
- You should go to church at Easter and Christmas.
- If you were to go on holiday on the continent in wintertime what sport could you take part in?
- Everybody went to church on Christmas Day.
- About nine o'clock he went out to the kitchen.
- ...to help keep their families going over the winter.
- City Music Hall is going to close down after Easter.
- She never goes abroad.
- I used to go in three mornings a week.
- He was going out four and sometimes five nights a week.
- In the last month of her pregnancy, we took to going out almost every evening.
- We'll go hunting every day.
- The next time I come here, I'm going to be better.
- Then of course you'll go with Parry. She's been your friend longer.
- Is he still thinking of going away to Italy for a month?
- They can go on making losses, year after year, without fearing that they will go bust.
- From the eighteenth century on, great private palaces went up.
- The chat shows goes out midnight through six a.m.
- I'm going to handle this my way.
- Obviously crime is going to be squeezed in a variety of ways.
- They would go on talking for hours.
- `I'm going to do it', I said quietly.
- They managed to keep his circulation going more successfully than we did.
- A child cools off quickest if the parents fade away and go about their business.
- Overall, the operation had gone very well.
- I just know I'm going to be late.
- I hope you can see slightly more clearly what is going on.
- He went to the back of the store.
- I went into the kitchen and began to make the dinner.
- The children have gone to school.
- I'm going with her to Australia.
- We went to the bottom of the field where a wagon stood half-loaded. We crawled underneath, between the wheels.
- Everywhere I went, people were angry or suspicious.
- We could go to Majorca if you want somewhere lively.
- Are you going somewhere special?
- Go north from Leicester Square up Wardour Street.
- `Where are you going?' demanded Miss Craig as Florrie rushed by.
- Soblen could have gone elsewhere.
- He went off somewhere for a shooting weekend.
- There was hardly anywhere to go.
- If you're going to behave like this, the best thing you can do is to go back to bed.
- Those men, when we get them into the police force, are going to be real heroes.
- `How's it all going?' Derek asked.
- `I'll go to him in a minute,' she thought.
- He didn't want to go.
- `Let's go and have a look at the swimming-pool,' she suggested.
- `When do you leave?'*`I should be gone now.'*`Well, good-bye, Hamo.'
- I must go and see Lynn, Marsha thought.
- `Let's go,' I whispered.
- *We have to go home,* she told him.
- I told him that nothing was going to happen to me.
- Henry said that he wanted to go home.
- Georgina said she was going to bed.
- He asked me where I was going.
- Someone asked me if the work was going well.
- He asked where I was going.
- Barbara suggested going to another coffee-house.
- I think it's going to rain.
- He said he really had to go back inside.
- Henry said that he wanted to go home.
- I explained to her that I had to go home.
- It emerged that, during the afternoon, she had gone home unwell.
- The decision to go had not been an easy one to make.
- I am confident that I shall be able to persuade them to go.
- It seems probable that the world can go on producing enough food for everyone.
- Whether I went twice or not doesn't matter.
- When he had gone, Valentina sighed.
- They were going by car because it was more comfortable.
- I want to see you for a few minutes at twelve o'clock, when you go to lunch.
- I look after the children while she goes to London.
- The next time I come here, I'm going to be better.
- Every time I go to that class I panic.
- Stay with me until I go.
- I deliberately didn't read the book before going to see the film.
- If I went back on the train it'd be cheaper.
- If they wanted to go out, they could always count on me to stay with the baby.
- It's late, and if I am to get any sleep I must go.
- If you are to escape, you must leave me and go on alone.
- Whether you go to a launderette or do your washing at home, the routine is the same.
- Wherever it is, you aren't going.
- As Celia had gone to school, it seemed a good time for Lady Ravenscroft to invite her sister to stay.
- I hope that nobody was so stupid as to go around saying those things.
- They obeyed him with such willingness that the strike went on for over a year.
- Everywhere I went, people were angry or suspicious.
- In Bali, wherever you go, you come across ceremonies.
- Nearly all the people I used to know have gone.
- ...that place I used to go to last term.
- ...a woman friend with whom Rose used to go for walks.
- There are other problems, which I don't propose to go into at the moment.
- I want to see you at 12 o'clock, when you go to your lunch.
- Later he went to New Zealand, where he did all sorts of jobs.
- 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.
- The subject having been opened, he had to go on with it.
- He proceeded to light his pipe. That done, he put on his woollen scarf and went out.
- George having been carried to his cabin, Ash had gone up to the deserted deck.
- Anna had to go into town and she wanted to go to Bride Street.
- When she recognized Morris she went pale, then blushed.
- So don't go prying into my affairs or you'll get hurt.
- Neither Binta nor anyone else was going to speak.
- Mrs Roberts cooked, cleaned, mended, and went to meetings of the sewing club.
- 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.
- After you've set your goals, remember them by using a list. Anything that is worth doing should go on this list.
- In 1973 he went on a caravan holiday. At the beginning of this holiday he began to experience pain in his chest.
- Keep supplies of rice and spaghetti. Also, to go with the above, Parmesan cheese and tins of tomatoes.
- People will feel the need to be informed and they will go wherever they can to get this information.
- `Martin, what are you going to do?'*`That's a good question, Larry.'
- I never did go to Stratford, although I probably should have.
- `He's going to die, you see.'*`Die?'
- `Where are we going?*`Up the coast.'
- `Can I go swimming?'*`No, it's too cold.'
- It is really wonderful how the time has gone.
- Life is going to be a little easier in economic terms.
- They had arrived in style, carnations in their buttonholes; they went out in style too.
- Never feed your rabbit raw potatoes that have gone green*they contain a poison. Similarly, never feed it rhubarb leaves.
- Published in 1983, the book has since gone through six reprints.
- Go and see Terry Brown about it. Come back to me afterwards.
- We stayed fifteen miles from Bonar Bridge. And we went up the coast too.
- In particular, I'm going to concentrate on hydro-electricity.
- At eight o'clock I went down for my breakfast.
- What I'm going to do next I don't quite know.
- We've got to go, my dear.