Example sentences of "[pers pn] make the journey " in BNC.

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1 Yet a combination of things , active marketing by both the gallery and the artist herself , made me make the journey to Watermans .
2 Katharine and I made the journey to the Catherston Stud , just outside Brockenhurst in Hampshire , together .
3 In April I make the journey to London from my home in Suffolk , with my paintings carefully wrapped up in the back of my car .
4 Via a US dealer , she made the journey to the RSA in 1990 .
5 No matter how many times she made the journey , this on-high vista proved endlessly fascinating .
6 She makes the journey to Sanderstown in under the hour . ’
7 All I would want is for you to make the journey into the burning , and then come back and report .
8 While it might be to your advantage to do so at the earliest opportunity , there is nevertheless no legal urgency for you to make the journey other than at your convenience .
9 We made the journey in three days ; we could have done it in two but we chose not to .
10 ‘ Did they make the journey safely ? ’
11 Ronni had plenty of time to torture herself with these thoughts as they made the journey back to Olbia , barely exchanging a word the whole way .
12 They make the journey to Gorleston where they face Rookery Park in their semi-final .
13 This , presumably , is because they make the journey at very great depths , far below the reach of drift nets or trawls and since they are no longer feeding there is little chance of catching them on baited hooks or in traps .
14 In desperation , she managed to get the head of a psychiatric hospital near Plymouth to travel to Four Winds , when it became clear that Liza 's agoraphobia was too severe to allow her to make the journey to him .
15 When he moved from Newcastle-upon-Tyne to Nottingham he made the journey down the A1 for better fishing and the chance to learn from big name anglers .
16 Again he made the journey on 4th with the ‘ Miller 's cart ’ to prepare .
17 The fact was , that he made the journey ; shabby and penniless , he had to look up addresses of kinsfolk in English towns ; he had been robbed by con-men on board the ship , for Dad was a simple , trusting person , one might say , naive .
18 He made the journey along with the 26-odd winning captains from the recent past , including ‘ Monsieur Rugby ’ Jean Prat ( Lourdes ) , and to the most successful captain in the history of French club rugby , Béziers scrum-half Richard Astre .
19 He had a full scrip of the small white flowers when he made the journey for the seventh time , and saw the three riders pace in at the gatehouse , and stood unobserved to watch Tutilo dismount , part amicably from his guards , and come wearily towards the gatehouse door , as if he would himself take the key and deliver himself dutifully back to his captivity .
20 The evidence of the available texts and manuscripts is against such an emendation , however , since none of them has such a reading ; and it seems more likely that Ibn Hajar means no more than that Molla Fenari was in his twenties when he made the journey to Egypt .
21 To return to Molla Fenari , one can not then determine with any certainty the date of his journey to Egypt since it is impossible to assert confidently which of the seemingly contradictory facts or sets of facts-Ibn Hajar 's statement that he made the journey in 778 , Taskopruzade 's statement that he went in company with Seyyid Serif , Taskopruzade 's association of Seyyid Serif 's arrival in Karaman with Cemaleddin Aksarayi 's death , and so on-deserves most weight , though perhaps the specific nature of Ibn Hajar 's date argues in its favour while , equally , the slight suspicion which always attaches to attempts to associate great figures of the past argues against the association of Molla Fenari and Seyyid Serif .
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