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13 Sentences With "gone over the top"

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

Clinton, she would have gone over the top shortly after the polls closed in New Jersey, around 8 p.m.
"I think the rhetoric has really gone over the top," added McMahon, a two-time GOP Senate candidate in Connecticut.
Water has already gone over the top of one levee, prompting people to evacuate areas nearby, the office of Illinois Gov.
Who among us hasn't gone over-the-top trying to zap a zit, only to find out you've made it way worse?
Conservative analyst Kelsey Harkness said on Friday that voters believe "the conversation surrounding Russia" in the U.S. has gone over the top.
As befits an extremely adorable baby like Chrissy Teigen and John Legend's daughter, her family and friends have gone over the top with her first birthday presents.
The show could have gone over the top with the moment, using it to pull on the heartstrings — and I bet a lot of fans would have been happy to see it played that way.
And I think this year, it has just gone over the top with support and turn out and just the passion around what I do personally on the court, but you can tell that the game of basketball is healthy and alive.
' is a corrupt oligarch who deals in illegal weapons. He has a frightening temper and has often said to have gone "over the top". ' is Denis' brother and the brutal head of police in Aero City.
At the same time, D company was pinned down while en route to Vegas. By 13:05, D company had reached the lower slopes of outpost Vegas. By 13:22, the Marines had "gone over the top" on the outpost's hill. E Company soon followed and passed through D Company's ranks to secure the trenches and crest of Vegas.
On the skull was a bronze headband, with the remains of another band that would have gone over the top. Both the skull and the "crown", as it came to be named, were badly damaged, thought by the archaeologists who discovered it to be the result of ploughing. Closer inspection after cleaning revealed it to be intricately decorated in the La Tène style. The bronze, now dull, would once have been burnished till it shone.
Newfoundland at the time was not a part of the Canadian confederation but was considered a separate dominion; as a result, the Newfoundlanders advanced as part of the 29th Division, not the Canadian Corps. The attack went very poorly for the Newfoundlanders, resulting in massive casualties – of the 801 men that made up the regiment just the day before, only 68 reported for roll call on 2 July, and every officer that had gone over the top had been killed. The Canadian Corps entered the battle in September when it was tasked to secure the small town of Courcelette, France. In the major offensive which began at dawn on September 15 the Canadian Corps, on the extreme left of the attack, assaulted on a 2,200-yard sector west of the village of Courcelette.
In late September and October 2013, Dacre became the subject of criticism across the UK media and political spectrum after the Daily Mail published a piece on 28 September maligning Ralph Miliband, a deceased Marxist academic and father of Ed Miliband, the leader of the Labour opposition at the time. The original article, entitled "The Man Who Hated Britain", alleged that Ralph Miliband detested the country he and his father had fled to from Nazi- occupied Europe on the basis of a diary note written when he was sixteen and because of his left-wing views. Ed Miliband requested a right-of-reply piece to be published, which was granted but placed alongside a reprinting of the original article and an editorial criticising him for responding, while insisting that Ralph Miliband did hate Britain and that his son's ambition was to inflict his father's Marxism upon the country. Roy Greenslade thought "the decision to carry [Ed] Miliband's right of reply was...possibly unprecedented" and implied "the Mail knew it had gone over the top with its" claims about Ralph Miliband.

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