Proceed in a sentence as a verb

Get enough points, proceed to the next grade.

Score high enough on the leader board, proceed to the college you want.

If you get the resources and proceed to balls up your project, you can always quit.

Do you need me to say anything else or can we just proceed directly to 'He gets them'?

"You must give us your name and image or you cannot proceed" the interface insists.

They have a sense of what they want but insufficient life experiences to make right judgments about how best to proceed.

That's ok, keep promoting the hiring of greenhorns who think everything they dream up is new and then proceed to reinvent the wheel.

The credit card company is about to sell this debt to a collector for $1k, who will proceed to make my life miserable.

He showed precisely how to overthrow the existing order, but he did not say how matters should proceed thereafter.

Thus, having accomplished the revolution, Lenin must have realized that the writings of the master gave no indication as to how to proceed.

Additionally, it is quite plausible that Paypal could demonstrate that success is a curse to new businesses and most which blow up proceed to, well, blow up.

Then everything would be able to proceed by itself along the right path, because everything would belong to everyone and all would desire the best for one another.

In any deal that really matters, it is usually a mistake to proceed without lawyers and it is an equally big mistake to give the lawyers sole discretion in how to do the project.

The next of kin are affected, but their lives proceed in a society which has retained its usual level of function, with employment continuing, transportation networks operating, and food supply lines functioning normally.

It really is poor business lawyering simply to proceed unthinkingly and one-dimensionally in every case to review and mark up everything no matter how remote the risk or how likely it is to be material.

Idea suggestion:Freely distribute a PDF that has unique border patterns so when people use/print it out and use that paper, and proceed to take a photo, the program can detect the borders and auto zoom in/out so you end up with a nicely fitted screen shot on the phone.

Like Dustin said,> "This is truly a nightmare scenario for any CEO: do you take the risk and proceed with the better user experience/product at the expense of short term numbers–with no promise that the better design will actually lead to long-term benefits–or do you scrap the new design and start over?

First, before you even start trying to get a meeting, these 2 things must both be true:• You have a strong hypothesis of what Company X’s specific pain point is, informed by research• If your hypothesis is right, there is a >50% chance that your product can actually solve their pain pointIf both of the above are not true, do not proceed.

The result will be, I believe, that Oracle will get its day in court but will only be able to proceed with a much-stripped-down version of its claims - something that might hurt Google a bit financially but will pose no real threat to the Android platform as a whole and will amount in time to nothing more than a blip on the radar.

After hiring a firm out of the midwest to manage the construction on a fixed-fee contract, it proceeded to make life miserable for that firm by making never-ending revisions to the project plans throughout the course of construction and this not only caused that firm to incur cost overruns but also had the effect of causing substantial delays in getting the work done.

Proceed definitions

verb

continue talking; "I know it's hard," he continued, "but there is no choice"; "carry on--pretend we are not in the room"

See also: continue

verb

move ahead; travel onward in time or space; "We proceeded towards Washington"; "She continued in the direction of the hills"; "We are moving ahead in time now"

See also: continue

verb

follow a procedure or take a course; "We should go farther in this matter"; "She went through a lot of trouble"; "go about the world in a certain manner"; "Messages must go through diplomatic channels"

See also: move

verb

follow a certain course; "The inauguration went well"; "how did your interview go?"

verb

continue a certain state, condition, or activity; "Keep on working!"; "We continued to work into the night"; "Keep smiling"; "We went on working until well past midnight"

See also: continue keep