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"go-as-you-please" Definitions
  1. not bound by rule, law, or convention : EASYGOING

29 Sentences With "go as you please"

How to use go as you please in a sentence? Find typical usage patterns (collocations)/phrases/context for "go as you please" and check conjugation/comparative form for "go as you please". Mastering all the usages of "go as you please" from sentence examples published by news publications.

"Are you free to come and go as you please?" the prosecutor, Sidhardha Kamaraju, asked.
You can come and go as you please, and you can stand anywhere, as in any other gallery.
I work at a company where you can come and go as you please, as long as your work is done.
The good thing about Netflix, HBO, Hulu, and others is that there's no contract or obligation involved, and you can come and go as you please.
Why risk your life on an eight day March through the desert and pay a coyote $4,000 when you can pay the U.S. government $3,85033 and come and go as you please?
Anybody who's been locked up will tell you, if there's gates—'cause when you get to heaven, you're free to go as you please, you're free to leave, you know, you made it.
Until your company is in a place where you can afford to take time away from it, the perks of being the boss don't mean you can come and go as you please and still expect your business to thrive.
Forty-two teams started at midnight in... the six-day, "go as you please" pedestrian race. ... running, jogging, and walking in every variety of gait known to pedestrianism. ...each man to walk not more than 12 hours a day.
The celebration was inaugurated early in the day by a go-as-you-please procession from one saloon to another, the man who had the most money acting as Grand Marshal. By dark the crowds were ready to celebrate the birthday of anybody who would put up for whisky.
National Library of Singapore. The Straits Times. 19 August 1902 On 30 Hakihea (December) 1903 the Otago Witness reported that Len Hurst would represent England at the Vélodrome Buffalo in Paris in the Fifty mile 'Go as you please' race for professional pedestrians of all nations. Each competitor was accompanied by two cyclists.
Jonathan Schaeffer, Yngvi Bjornsson, Neil Burch, Akihiro Kishimoto, Martin Muller, Rob Lake, Paul Lu and Steve Sutphen. Solving Checkers, International Joint Conference on Artificial Intelligence (IJCAI), pp. 292-297, 2005. Distinguished Paper Prize The solution is for the draughts variation called go-as-you-please (GAYP) checkers and not for the variation called three-move restriction checkers.
There are championships held in two versions. One is 3-Move, where players don't begin their game in the starting position but a position three moves in the game (often drawn randomly from all positions, excluding positions already losing a piece). The other is GAYP (Go as you please), where players start from the very beginning.
In 1889, Oofty Goofty took part in a go-as-you- please walking match in California and walked 223 miles in six days. He appeared in many other California area walking matches during the next few years. Afterwards, Goofty attempted to gain success through the stage and theater. He played Romeo opposite actress "Big Bertha's" Juliet, but the play proved disastrous.
Lauder often sang to the miners in Hamilton, who encouraged him to perform in local music halls. While singing in nearby Larkhall, he received 5 shillings—the first time he was paid for singing. He received further engagements including a weekly "go-as-you please" night held by Mrs. Christina Baylis at her Scotia Music Hall/Metropole Theatre in Glasgow.
Lubabalo Nicholas Kondlo (born December 21, 1971) is a grandmaster of English draughts (also known as American checkers) from South Africa. He is the current world champion in the GAYP (go as you please) version. Born in New Brigton, Port Elizabeth, Kondlo started to play draughts at the age of seven years. In 2007, he won the World Qualifier in Las Vegas, United States and became the first draughts grandmaster from Africa.
In an example, a student can skip French class to play music, but cannot disruptively play music during the French class. Against the popular image of "go as you please schools", Summerhill has many rules. However, they are decided at a schoolwide meeting where students and teachers each have one vote apiece. This does not necessarily mean total cessation to the children, as Neill thought adults were right to bemoan child destruction of property.
In shogi, Cheerful Central Rook (ゴキゲン中飛車 gokigen nakabisha, also Gokigen Central Rook or Go-As-You-Please Central Rook) is a type of Central Rook opening in which the Central Rook player's bishop diagonal remains open. This is a more aggressive strategy since the bishops may be exchanged at any time during the opening. (See: Ranging Rook#Types of Ranging Rook.) Cheerful Central Rook is played against a Static Rook opponent.
Don Lafferty (1933–1998) was a Grandmaster checkers (British English: draughts) player. In 1982 he defeated Derek Oldbury for the World GAYP (Go as you please) championship with a score of 1-0-23. He was challenged for the championship in 1984 by Paul Davis, winning easily 5-0-15. In 1986 he defended his title again by drawing James Morrison with a score of 0-0-24 and in 1989 he defeated Elbert Lowder 4-3-16.
Amangul Berdieva (née Durdyeva; born 1987) is an English draughts and international draughts player from Turkmenistan. She is twice women's world champion of English draughts (also known as checkers) in both 3-Move and GAYP (Go As You Please) versions. Amangul Berdieva won the first women's GAYP World Qualifier tournament in 2005 in Prague, ahead of New Zealander Jan Mortimer. The former was awarded the Women's World GAYP Champion title in 2006, after the latter withdrew from the world title match.
In 2006 In London Caws won a bronze medal at the Go As You Please (GAYP) English Open championship, behind two male rivals Dave Harwood and C. McCarrick. For 37 years Joan Caws served as the Treasurer of the national draughts federation. In addition, she was trusted with refereeing at Charles Walker's successful attempt at the World simultaneous play record setting in 1994 and at the 2008 World Mind Sports Games. Caws also took active part in the campaign to get draughts in the Olympic program.
The 6-Day Race became a standard footrace distance in the 1870s and was a popular form of entertainment where up to 70,000 paying visitors, in 1877, came to watch the Pedestrians battle it out. However the widespread use of the bicycle from 1890 caused it to be replaced as spectator sport by cycle races of the same duration.Noakes, T. D., (2006) Basic Research in Cardiology 101 408–417 The limits of endurance exercise It was in two forms: strict "heel- and-toe" racewalking, or "go-as-you-please" combination of walking, jogging, running.
A flea circus: "The Go-As-You-Please Race, as seen through a Magnifying Glass", engraved by J. G. Francis, from an article by C. F. Holder in St. Nicholas Magazine, 1886 Flea circuses provided entertainment to nineteenth century audiences. These circuses, extremely popular in Europe from 1830 onwards, featured fleas dressed as humans or towing miniature carts, chariots, rollers or cannon. These devices were originally made by watchmakers or jewellers to show off their skill at miniaturization. A ringmaster called a "professor" accompanied their performance with a rapid circus patter.
A competitive checkers player, Webster won the United States Blitz Go-As-You-Please Championship at the American Checker Federation National Championship in Medina, Ohio on July 25, 2011. He also won the North Carolina State Checkers Open in Greensboro, North Carolina on May 18, 2011 and the Southern Open in Lebanon, Tennessee on July 10, 2011. He was a silver medalist at the West Tennessee Strawberry Festival Open on 7 May 2011 in Humboldt, Tennessee. In October 2011 he competed in San Remo, Italy at the World Qualifier Checkers Tournament.
The growing popularity of roller skating in the United States led to the formation of organized endurance races as early as 1884, when skater Victor W. Clough skated 100 miles over the course of nearly ten hours in Geneseo, Illinois. In 1885, a six-day "go-as-you-please" competition was staged at Madison Square Garden in New York City, with 36 skaters competing for $500$ in recent dollars. in prize money. Two deaths resulted from the six-day race: both the winner, William Donovan, and skater Joseph Cohen died shortly after the race was completed.
Jervis, 1961, p 53 Since its foundation at this time the square has been managed by Parramatta City Council. Alfred Square was a vibrant community space that hosted a wide range of local events. In the 1880s, for example, events included open-air moonlight and afternoon concerts, a "great...go-as-you- please" 48-hour tournament in a "monster marquee" capable of holding 3,000 people and "brilliantly illuminated each evening," as well as a "Words of Grace Tent" where locals could attend evangelistic services. In late 1889, council discussed the construction of a bandstand in Alfred Square for the local band concerts that had become a regular occurrence.
The men's World Championship in English draughts dates to the 1840s, predating the men's Draughts World Championship, the championship for men in International draughts, by several decades. Noted world champions include Andrew Anderson, James Wyllie, Robert Martins, Robert D. Yates, James Ferrie, Alfred Jordan, Newell W. Banks, Robert Stewart, Asa Long, Walter Hellman, Marion Tinsley, Derek Oldbury, Ron King, Michele Borghetti, Alex Moiseyev, Patricia Breen, and Amangul Durdyyeva.WCDF champions list Championship held in GAYP (Go As You Please) and 3-Move versions. The winners in men's have been from the United Kingdom, United States, Barbados, and most recently Italy in the 3-Move division.
In 1918, she was performing in "Merry-go-round" around the country until September, then "Keep to the Right", "Go as you please" and "The River Girl" simultaneously. The war had ended but her performances continued into 1919, adding "Fall In" to the list of shows. May Morton was engaged to Stanley Mohr on 5 December 1919 and they were married the following April. In spite of saying that she would give up work on her marriage, May Morton did return to the stage in 1937 playing “the chattering busybody friend of Mrs Blake” in Marie Oxenford’s comedy “The Worm that Turned”, which premiered at the De La Warr Pavilion in Bexhill (Brighton Evening Argus 1 December 1937).
Littlewood would later remark that this was the greatest race he ever won. His next event which was his first venture to London, where in September, of the same year, and competing in field of 29 at the Agricultural Hall, Islington, he won the Sir John Astley, 'Champion Gold Medal' and a prize of £60, which included £10 for beating the then world record of 405 miles. Now established as an up-and-coming figure in his chosen sport, his connections entered the then 21-year-old into the 6th international version of the Astley Belt — the blue riband 142-hour, six days, 'go-as you- please' contest again at the “Aggie”.
George Littlewood was born on 20 March 1859, in Rawmarsh, Yorkshire, England. In November 1879, Littlewood starred in his first race as a budding long-distance athlete in a six-day, 72-hour, 12 hours per day, 'go- as-you-please' event in which he came in fourth of 28 contestants winning a prize of £4 for scoring 275 miles in the allotted time on a 19-lap to the mile track at Wolverhampton. He then went Nottingham, in February 1880, where, in a 7-day, six hours per night contest, he came in 5th of 19 runners, winning £2. A couple of months later, he went to Leeds where he won his first race in a field of 13 contestants and created a new 12 hours per day, 72-hour world record of 374 miles on a 38-lap to the mile track in a circus rink. For winning, he secured the £35 first prize — plus an extra prize of £10 for beating the record.

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