Example sentences of "has go [adv prt] " 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 Please remember that life has to go on abroad as well as at home .
4 It is usually noticeable that when a masochist has for years felt hard done by , often over-controlled by their partner , and then for some reason the tables are turned , he or she metes out punishment as if this has to go on for the same length of time that the masochist 's suffering was endured .
5 ‘ I took her to a little friend 's birthday party yesterday — life when you 're almost two has to go on as near to normal as we can make it .
6 ‘ Life has to go on , but Tony 's has n't . ’
7 It 's true that the show has to go on but if such behaviour caught on I 'd be bound to go on and say , ‘ Ladies and gentlemen , so-and-so is n't coming ’ because they not only want to appear on the show , they want to produce it as well ! ’
8 Aegina — like a tiny Hong Kong — has to go on buying the stuff from the mainland .
9 We agree with MacGowan and Reeves that the half life may be inaccurate if it is calculated from only two values ; but perhaps that is why they have never seen a patient with normal renal function in whom the half life is as long as 7.6 hours , since in clinical practice two measurements are all one has to go on .
10 If they are to be more than mere training , then a process of informed reflection has to go on at the same time .
11 Obviously , learning has to go on in our institutions of higher education , but the idea of higher education points to a separate aspect of personal development .
12 ‘ But — life has to go on .
13 Has to go on , forever .
14 Every time we have any spare money , it has to go on pigging coal .
15 Every time we have any spare money , it has to go on pigging coal .
16 Ooh gosh and me dad yes , he used to do er , er , er , just a , he did n't do , do too many but he , he had , like a sort of a push truck like , you know and he has to go up and that , that only round not too far and he , he like to do it I think more .
17 that both Gethwyn and Russell sorted out er who up on on those extremes that you get in a group that , that maybe feel they re that they really have nothing to , hardly anything to do with us they 've do n't receive ministry and why should that be , and after be asked each year , has to go up ?
18 Yeah , has to go up
19 But I mean Alan has to go up to London !
20 But they they , that was n't accurate because it has to go up , to have fifteen kilometres a second .
21 So that means that the productivity has to go up , presumably .
22 No matter what i she has to go through .
23 Our view of the pig/human relationship is that the farther out of sight the living pig is , the better — as though the actual animal is an embarrassing stage that pigfeed has to go through on its way to being packaged bacon .
24 First , is the procedure that the buyer has to go through to claim the remedy a proper one from an administrative point of view , or is it designed to make it difficult or impossible in practice for the buyer to invoke the clause ?
25 SunPics , which still has to go over to SVR4 , should take longer , say the second half of 1993 .
26 they that has to go over to there , so
27 Clearly there is a range of similar applications such as warehouses and supermarkets where someone has to go around checking stock and then enter the data into a computer .
28 He is n't allowed to play football and has to go back to the hospital for treatment .
29 ‘ We 've only got her for five years , then she has to go back to the Foundling Hospital . ’
30 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 .
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