Download

How To Use Go under In A Sentence

  • In 1975, after losing 3 "weathermen" terrrorists in a bomb-making accident and being that they are now on the FBI's 10 Most Wanted List, Ayers & Dohrn "go underground". Latest Articles
  • If we were proscribed we would go underground, and anything that's underground surfaces.
  • A loose, launderable sweater or sweatshirt that lets you move but can go under your smock is another useful item to have in your cleaning closet. HOME COMFORTS
  • What the little waking dream revealed to me was that INSTEAD of the little allice in wonderland dress I had been planning to go under the FABULOUS crushed red velvet cape edged in wide satin red ribbon and lined with red moire silk; [Did I mention I'm a bit of a seamstress?} Madrigle Diary Entry
  • In the programme, rich benefactors say goodbye to their luxury lifestyles and go undercover in deprived areas to find organisations that need their help. Times, Sunday Times
Enhance Your English Writing Skills
Fix common errors and boost your confidence in every sentence.
Get started
for free
Enhance Your English Writing Skills
  • More and more women are choosing to go under the knife to improve their appearance.
  • I'd pop over the road to Mother India cafe and smell the food, which I still believe to be a free activity.www.glasgowlife.org.uk/museumsThere's a beach called New Polzeath in Cornwall where you can wade out, go under a peak and get to a little secret beach where you can pick cowry shells. The insider's guide to free arts
  • Various other exegetic books and lives of saints go under his name; he is also the author of at least one religious poem.
  • In all, 277 lots comprising clothing, medals, trophies and ephemera spanning a century will go under the hammer at the sale.
  • It will go under the hammer on December 2 and is expected to realise over $1 million.
  • As Wimbledon go under, we are immune to their pain, unmoved by their plight.
  • Once we decided to go underground we had to find money and food and the means to carry out the actions.
  • The charity will go under unless a generous donor can be found within the next few months.
  • It happened just 10 months ago under the elected civilian government of President Olusegun Obasanjo.
  • The Western banking system collapsed three years ago under a cascade of bad debts. Times, Sunday Times
  • This is all the more ironic considering the months of rigorous structuring, arranging and rehearsing that such tuneage must go under before being anywhere near presentable.
  • A recession causes many reliable creditworthy consumers to go under; how safe will new and existing scoring systems now be?
  • In ancient Greece this might go under the name of "aporia". Philosophy Blog
  • A private collection of her early paintings is expected to go under the hammer early next year.
  • The Western banking system collapsed three years ago under a cascade of bad debts. Times, Sunday Times
  • The firm will go under unless business improves.
  • Winners' plaques, bowling woods, cribbage boards and a railway engine name plate are among the items to go under the hammer at Kidson Trigg auctioneers, in Sevenhampton, Highworth, tomorrow.
  • Unless another rich benefactor was found the club would go under. Times, Sunday Times
  • IT has to be one of the worst places to go undercover. The Sun
  • City fans will be given a chance to get hold of their own piece of football history when items from Maine Road go under the auctioneer's hammers.
  • This psalm is the last of those that go under the name of Asaph. Commentary on the Whole Bible Volume III (Job to Song of Solomon)
  • I decided to go undercover and find out. Times, Sunday Times
  • It discusses how many authors in sci-fifi, fantasy, and horror are known solely because of appearances on the NYT bestseller lists, yet other lesser known authors go under the radar with casual readers. Wag the Blog #1: What Does a Seal's Heart Taste Like?
  • Without new safeguards, however, MPs scrutinising his bill will be obliged to ask themselves: how many of their constituents would be happy to go under the cut-price knife? Health service reform: Perils of the cut-price knife | Editorial
  • The medal will go under the hammer too, with letters, drawings and early drafts. Times, Sunday Times
  • Kelly was about to go under the knife when her surgeon stopped everything.
  • Although she was still making headway, her bow began to go under.
  • But will he finally get some credit as he volunteers to go undercover on a dangerous building site? The Sun
  • We might all have to go underground and sulk for all eternity.
  • A single tear traveled down his face as he watched the bunny go under the barbwire fence.
  • At emergence, the seeker may reconstruct the ego under the Will, that the ego will in totality reflect the true light.
  • The film will premiere at the Chicago Underground Film Festival this summer.
  • The plot concerns Texas Ranger Tommy Lee, who must go undercover as a cheerleading coach in order to protect five airheaded nymphets who have witnessed a murder.
  • KICKASS!! oh yeah, me and Rocio got this really cute tank top that has a litle star with the word fucker proceding it (get it ... ehh) and on the back right below the neck it says "I'm one of the chosen ones" and the it has the cute little NIN logo under that! La-pendeja Diary Entry
  • I also bought a basic brown pants suit with a blue bouse, and I already owned a basic black pants suit, and I bought a bright pink top to go underneath it. One Bright Star (1B*) Reignited
  • The investigator, who did not go undercover, interviewed employees to find out whether anyone else had complained.
  • Must say the present head of Telstra would go under the title ugly american type but American's don't have a lock on arrogance. Whirlpool.net.au
  • In the new version, the banker is a Wall Street CEO He overextends mortgages, he loses the bank, and when things go under, he uses his get-out-of-jail-for-free card.
  • IT has to be one of the worst places to go undercover. The Sun
  • A rare nameplate from a steam locomotive named after a famous North Yorkshire building is to go under the hammer.
  • They prepare to strike without warning as they go undercover to retrieve two missing silver bands.
  • But will he finally get some credit as he volunteers to go undercover on a dangerous building site? The Sun
  • The striker is nursing a knee injury and may have to go under the knife. The Sun
  • The medal will go under the hammer too, with letters, drawings and early drafts. Times, Sunday Times
  • The Western banking system collapsed three years ago under a cascade of bad debts. Times, Sunday Times
  • Ian Fleming's original unpublished notes are to go under the hammer at London auctioneers Sotheby's.
  • The Chicago Underground is made up of core duo cornettist Rob Mazurek and drummer Chad Taylor which augments with guest players to become Trios, Quartets, even an Orchestra.
  • The lap strap should go under your belly, across your hips, and as high as possible on your thighs.
  • Some people say you could never ban firework sales outright because then they would go underground and you would have a black market.
  • Grief is not something you can go underneath or around. Times, Sunday Times
  • These ugly billboards have to go ! These luxuries all had to go under the Khmer Rouge.
  • They plan to bring in generators and pallets to go under tents. Times, Sunday Times
  • Because I'm a bad swimmer, I often go under and swallow a lot of water.
  • Soil temperatures rise the deeper you go underground. Times, Sunday Times
  • I don't think you were here back when Catherine and her little possie thought they ran this blog … back in the fall. .things fell apart for them in here and they left and a few others left to go underground with the sewar rats! Blogger News Network
  • He had been troubled by a left inguinal hernia in his lower abdomen, so he booked a date with the sawbones to go under the knife and get it fixed.
  • Cynics will say that it will go underground, but I choose to believe that the US Congress has succeeded in shutting down the ultra-panoptic Total Information Awareness program — the scheme to protect Americans from tyranny through total dataveillance of our every move. Smart Mobs » Blog Archive » Congress Nixes Total Information Awareness
  • I go under the table to run my fingertip over their convolutions.
  • Indeed, the national U.S. drinking age of 21 has inadvertently caused the 18 to 20 year olds to go underground where they learn to binge rather than quaff a casual stein.
  • Some Uzbek soups are euphoniously called shurpa, and a prominent range of main dishes there go under the name plov.
  • The charity will go under unless a generous donor can be found within the next few months.
  • The charity will go under unless a generous donor can be found within the next few months.
  • But is the hoyden mode a constant, or does it sometimes go underground?
  • I learned graphic design on the job from the best in the business while I watched every color separator and phototypesetter who had considered the Mac a toy and unsuitable for professional work go under. MacInTouch
  • You know, just in case I might really need to go underground some day.
  • A grim future awaits the area if the pits are allowed to go under.
  • We must reorganize the company if we don't want to go under
  • The second generation of sociobiologists, who are much more circumspect in avoiding some of the brash pronouncements of the 1970s, go under the name of ‘evolutionary psychologists’.
  • A private collection of her early paintings is expected to go under the hammer early next year.
  • Many of the older models will be passed on to used car dealers to sell or to go under the hammer at auction. The Sun
  • The weak fall, but the strong will remain and never go under! Anne Frank 
  • Kelly was about to go under the knife when her surgeon stopped everything.
  • All the electricity lines had to go underground and streets were widened.
  • Unless another rich benefactor was found the club would go under. Times, Sunday Times
  • The firm will go under unless business improves.
  • Stroked a tom-cat under the chin and watched a steam train go under a bridge.
  • Stroked a tom-cat under the chin and watched a steam train go under a bridge.
  • She discovers that the magazine is a front for the organization, and decided to go undercover.
  • You can go underwater for two hours to a depth of up to 50 metres - and be well within the sub's safety limits.
  • Why does a young man go underground? Times, Sunday Times
  • The skeletons of a woolly rhinoceros and of a cave bear along with rare bird and fish fossils are also to go under the hammer during the April 16 auction in Paris.
  • Hedonistic, self-indulgent, voluptuous societies succumb to their enemies and go under.
  • Many new zero-hours contracts will last less than 12 weeks or go underground. Times, Sunday Times
  • With 280 bhp and 363 Nm torque, the Nissan has lots of go under any circumstances.
  • More and more women are choosing to go under the knife to improve their appearance.
  • The plot concerns Texas Ranger Tommy Lee, who must go undercover as a cheerleading coach in order to protect five airheaded nymphets who have witnessed a murder.
  • They are excavating on both sides of the M62, cutting a diversion channel so the canal go under the motorway bridge without disrupting traffic above.
  • I guess that’s what we get for complaining about the impact on polar bears and the like for so long … This only increases the absolute necessity to develop monitoring capability and decision-making tools to illustrate the impact climate change will have on the individual farmer, water-front property owner, fisherman, bird-spotter, and community likely to take a hit when neighboring communities go under water/become unbearable due to lack of water. Wonk Room » The Environmental Inverted Pyramid, Corrected
  • A private collection of her early paintings is expected to go under the hammer early next year.
  • Champ an 'stick up for him too; he's good blood, an' ef he did go under for a spell, he ain't no worse 'n the rest, nor half ez bad; for Champ went in _of his own accord -- of his own accord_, "he repeated significantly," an' don't you forget thet, Aileen! Flamsted quarries
  • The striker is nursing a knee injury and may have to go under the knife. The Sun
  • Over 30 years ago undergraduate physics labs in Glasgow University were run on very similar lines to the Oxford system you describe.
  • Assassination not only neutralizes the dead man, it also forces other terrorists to go underground.
  • The medal will go under the hammer too, with letters, drawings and early drafts. Times, Sunday Times
  • Most British food critics make little effort to go undercover at restaurants and many openly mix with chefs and restaurateurs.
  • The charity will go under unless a generous donor can be found within the next few months.
  • Such techniques go under the collective name of geoengineering. Times, Sunday Times
  • I decided to go undercover and find out. Times, Sunday Times
  • Assange was certain "we wouldn't be safe walking down the street, that our mail and suitcases were being X-rayed, that we had to go underground ... and needed bulletproof vests," the book says. Insider Book Portrays Assange As 'Emperor'
  • In the new version, the banker is a Wall Street CEO He overextends mortgages, he loses the bank, and when things go under, he uses his get-out-of-jail-for-free card.
  • One in five of those companies do indeed go under or require financial reconstruction. Times, Sunday Times
  • She'll have to go under anaesthetic for the operation.
  • The ships left Britain five weeks ago under a shroud of secrecy but it has proved impossible to keep their route secret.
  • He had a stroke, and he also had ileitis, an operation which is very serious, in which he had to go under an antiseptic. CNN Transcript Jun 5, 2005
  • But we do need the slave trade if we're not to go under.
  • Now her treasured possessions are to go under the hammer at Dale Wood Auctioneers in Batley, next Tuesday.
  • More and more women are choosing to go under the knife to improve their appearance.
  • With a resounding slap, I go under at a crooked angle that allows my tail bone to take the biggest hit.
  • Silently, he stops and gazes at a painting of a man and woman dancing the tango underneath the umbrellas of their servants; the shopkeeper sees him, and she goes outside to talk with him.
  • I submersed myself in the feeling, letting my head go under for a moment.
  • These luxuries all had to go under the Khmer Rouge
  • If the Scottish Tourist Board - or whatever daft name they now go under - were to design a mock Highland town full of tartan tat and kilted kitsch for the benefit of tourists, they might very well come up with Inveraray.
  • He taught her the merits of patience, the need to go underground. THE ENDLESS GAME
  • Hedonistic, self-indulgent, voluptuous societies succumb to their enemies and go under.
  • Skim the water with your head, dont go under and do not go to far above. you should be facing down in the water when you glid and when you pull look up take a breath and look down again facing the bottom. its good to have a perfect pull out and stream line becuase this is where you get most of your distance. Yahoo! Answers: Latest Questions
  • Many new zero-hours contracts will last less than 12 weeks or go underground. Times, Sunday Times
  • The 65 ft ‘Onward’ N.264 is the latest vessel to go under the breaker's hammer.
  • The statement that they peaked a few years ago underscores an inherent problem with most lists: A curse of the ephemeral.
  • Perhaps all of the indie labels will go under (including my own), and I'll be eating these words in a year.
  • In addition to the sock-type products, we also tested flat pads designed to go under the engine or other component that might drip oil.

Report a problem

Please indicate a type of error

Additional information (optional):