Example sentences of "have to go [adv prt] [prep] the [noun sg] " in BNC.

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1 Speaking after delivering an emotional tribute to his party workers , he said : ‘ There 's a great deal of serious reflection that has to go on in the opposition parties , but I 've no doubt that most of the reflection has to take place within Labour and it has to take place on the subject of PR .
2 Speaking after delivering an emotional tribute to his party workers , he said : ‘ There 's a great deal of serious reflection that has to go on in the opposition parties , but I 've no doubt that most of the reflection has to take place within Labour and it has to take place on the subject of PR .
3 He says he 's feeling better but he has to go back to the hospice .
4 The twentieth-century preference for ‘ the colloquial ’ in poetry may well be a temporary phenomenon ; Donald Davie 's Purity of Diction in English Verse ( 1952 ) , together with his admiration for the late Augustans , represent one attempt to revive an interest in the use of a ‘ civilized ’ diction ; it is interesting that he has to go back to the age before Wordsworth .
5 For comparison , one really has to go back to the Renaissance , to someone like Giovanni Bellini , who travelled an enormous territory ; even to Giotto , the artist who Matisse said was the peak of his aspiration .
6 In the meantime he has to go back to the town on further business , but first his horse needs shoeing , his cart needs repairing and he needs food and shelter .
7 ‘ We 've only got her for five years , then she has to go back to the Foundling Hospital . ’
8 He is n't allowed to play football and has to go back to the hospital for treatment .
9 Danny has to go down on the floor , put his hands on hips and go , evening all !
10 Well often I might see somebody waving out by the gate frantically trying to get in where he 's put one of his different size padlocks round the gate , the back gate and the front gate , and often if we need to feed the cat he 's padlocked all the different padlocks round the kitchen cupboards erm we 've been unable to get the cat food out , so we 've had to go off in the car and bring him back from a friend because he 's the only one who knows which key goes with which padlock to undo all the cupboards .
11 If we fell off the rope we would have had to go back to the start .
12 And the traditional Conservative chairman 's bash at Central Office may have to go on without the chairman : Chris Patten , busy in Bath , may not get back in time to drink with his team .
13 Going back to the agents up in the town , the boatmen to get information about a ship coming in they would have to go up to the town
14 They would have to go up to the town , yes
15 Do these all have to go up to the tower ? ’
16 They 'll have to go up into the attic .
17 He would have to go round to the back .
18 I would have to go off to the lavatory , come back and start the same scene with a variation .
19 I 'll have to go down to the roundabout and come back up .
20 I think it 'll have to go down to the post office , I 've write to Diane now
21 They would be perhaps regarded as thick as two short planks , er they would not be happy , they would be struggling to do work that was not honestly within their capacities , that being the case , they would almost certainly have to go down from the University .
22 She would have to go back to the hotel , or find another just as bad , and resume the soul-destroying trudge from one unsuitable rabbit-hutch to another .
23 You 'll have to go back to the nursery .
24 He might have to go back to the road and start again .
25 This also enables any eventual profit to be kept in the long term , avoiding the problem that if it is retained , any eventual surplus would have to go back to the borrower .
26 " I may have to go back to the bank for an hour or so — there 'll be all sorts of things piling up on my desk .
27 I 'll have to go back to the shop , and check up on them , as I said , hut I imagine you wo n't grudge me a glass of brandy first . "
28 The reforms could also mean that the most experienced specialist officers , such as police divers , would have to go back on the beat .
29 I 'll have to go back in the house because I 've got two odd gloves on .
30 Executives who commit corporate crime are not coerced into it , they do not necessarily have to go along with the advice or instructions of superiors .
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