Example sentences of "have [vb pp] through [prep] [art] [noun sg] " in BNC.
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1 | Unsure of whether she does owe him an explanation , of how much of her perspective she can get across in a conversation , and unwilling to let go of the London Kate who has broken through to the surface , she is ashamed of her suspicions of his reasons for asking her back to his place and agrees . |
2 | The second psychoanalytic message that has come through to the public is its preoccupation with sex . |
3 | The closure problem has come through in the appearance of another function F in the equation for E ; F is related to the Fourier transform of the triple correlation . |
4 | ‘ This is only the second time Derry has got through to the final in 35 years , so tickets this year are like gold dust , ’ he said . |
5 | Suppose the night porter has gone through to the kitchen to make a sandwich . |
6 | In the early twentieth century this linear model of human evolution was rejected in favour of a theory in which there were several parallel lines of human development , only one of which has survived through into the present . |
7 | I 'd got through to a girl I said extension two three six and then oh and the feller said er |
8 | When they 'd gone through into the lecture hall , I noticed the professor staring after them with a very odd look on his face — a stunned , frozen look . |
9 | But whatever their level of personal identification with the housewife role , the denigration and trivialization of housework is such a pervasive cultural theme that the message is likely to have filtered through to the housewife in some form or other . |
10 | In the three years since he had broken through as a pop star , Kylie has constructed a network of companies to handle her affairs . |
11 | ’ Like Muir , Eliot had won through to a vision of final acceptance , which allowed him to look back even to Sweeney and to call him , at Columbia in 1958 , ‘ friend ’ . |
12 | Now you 've got through to the semi-final , I always forget the title of it — it 's the Provincial Insurance Cup ? |
13 | Now we 've got through with the part that tells the audience all about Simple John Preston , let's have your reasons . |
14 | It might have been my colleague Ann — who knew my whereabouts — or even my editor , come to congratulate me on the first pages of Lover at the Gate which I had faxed through from the hotel 's secretariat — or even Sophie , come to apologize , though I hardly imagined she had been promoted from child to lady in the few weeks of my absence . |
15 | Even though it was beginning to recede in her memory , Folly still could n't quite see what she had gone through as a joke . |
16 | When he had gone through to the bedroom , tired , shaking , cold , she stripped herself of all the finery — fighting with clasps , pushing and twisting rings . |
17 | Evans had gone through into the lounge and was standing leaning against the mantelpiece in the classic pose of grief . |
18 | The Marshal had wandered through into the dining-room where lined foolscap and a box of pens and pencils lying between a pair of silver candlesticks suggested that the oak table was used for homework rather than for dining . |
19 | About half of the sixty-five guests had wandered through into the lecture hall , but since Anthea was due to give the address and she was still talking to the professor , there was time to spare . |
20 | The earth had been churned up black where forestry vehicles had passed through during the week , and there were cut and trimmed logs waiting for collection alongside the track . |
21 | Fowler , 24 , the top seed , had cruised through to the final against the County 's No 2 junior 16-year-old Ben O'Connor from Tennis World where he found the going much tougher . |
22 | We 've still got the Children Act coming through , I know that may appear a bit odd , but that Act was in fact in nineteen eighty nine , but it 's come through in a sense on an incremental basis , and it 's accepted by the Department of Health and er , the S S I , that indeed , and the Audit Commission , that there are elements in the present settlement for the Children Act . |
23 | Others have muddled through without a policy , although in that situation choices are still forced willy-nilly upon those who select materials . |
24 | ‘ Prices at the top end have fallen quite dramatically and now unemployment fears have filtered through to the middle and lower end of the market . ’ |
25 | However , for the nine students who have progressed through from the college 's National Certificate programme into the HNC course , it is all a very serious business . |
26 | I was very pleased with the finished result , but I must confess , after wearing it several times , a few of the cut floats have worked through to the front . |