Example sentences of "have gone to a [adj] [noun] " in BNC.

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1 ‘ One has gone to a better place without the other and that 's hard for the living who are left behind .
2 Since Fizz has gone to a better place and Bunny has n't been around , it 's improved immeasurably .
3 This is the first time this major title has gone to a coloured paddler and so is of great significance to those who think that canoeing is a whites-only sport .
4 Mary says now : ‘ Accessing my past lives has been of great benefit and I 'm sure that if I 'd gone to an ordinary therapist , nothing would have been sorted out . ’
5 And in the news business it is generally reckoned it could n't have gone to a nicer bloke .
6 I could n't have gone to a better place because they 'd got most parts of the country and one thing and another and I fitted their bill to a tee .
7 Like , in England we 'd never have gone to a domestic dispute unless a crime had been committed .
8 Ace appeared to have gone to a great deal of trouble to make this place so pretty and welcoming .
9 The distribution of work between the divisions of that court is only a matter of convenience ; the Queen 's Bench Division can never say ‘ here a matter of Equity is involved ; we can not decide it ’ , or the Chancery Division ‘ this is a question of Common Law ; you ought to have gone to a Common Law Court ’ .
10 Now we 've gone to a blue screen .
11 She had gone to a convalescent home in Bournemouth .
12 After leaving the letter in a drawer she had gone to a nearby town and booked in at a hotel .
13 It also meant that Leo had gone to an awful lot of trouble on her behalf .
14 The tickets already sold have gone to an established network of football fans , Rothenberg said .
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