0 he/she/it form of go
1 present simple of go, used with he/she/it
A sense of one's worth and dignity and the self-confidence which goes with it are indispensable ingredients of democratic politics.
The new set of laws goes much further.
The problems faced by the agent will have to be solved in real time, and time never goes backwards.
In other words, the consequentiality of theor y goes without saying and is, therefore, totally uninteresting if ever ything is theor y.25 24.
He even goes so far as to suggest that the terms marked/unmarked should be defined as 'less frequent/more frequent' (p. 67).
The argument goes that those particular children could not have been born without their putatively identity-linked disabilities.
He goes on to describe the role that mirror neurons might have played in a seven-stage development to full human language.
She offers us an "anthropolitical linguistic" analysis that goes far beyond the majority of studies on sociolinguistic factors.