Example sentences of "have to go [prep] [noun sg] " in BNC.
Next pageNo | Sentence |
---|---|
1 | Laird 's now has to go into battle without any chance of getting either naval orders or intervention funds . |
2 | He had the cheek to say he needed things for his wife who has to go into hospital . ’ |
3 | For example , if a carer has a sudden illness and has to go into hospital , the Emergency Intervention Service can support someone in their own home or provide alternative accommodation in the community . |
4 | In the meantime , if your child has to go into hospital , tell the hospital staff of any particular foods he does n't like or if he has any special dietary needs . |
5 | ‘ The committee has to go on record and declare that a drastic reduction in these resources will place the parish structure of the Kirk in jeopardy and seriously damage its mission to the people of Scotland . ’ |
6 | ‘ Be careful not to wake the crowd that has to go to school in the morning . ’ |
7 | ‘ Has it slipped your mind that the child has to go to school ? ’ |
8 | Is it really ? on the top there D d cos I suppose Amber has to go to school on Saturdays , does n't she ? |
9 | Looking at the yield curve graphically , Fig. 17.2(a) shows the ‘ normal ’ yield curve we would expect to find , with yields rising the longer the bond ( gilt ) has to go to maturity . |
10 | ‘ The only different thing about Maisie at the moment is that she has to go to hospital to have treatment . |
11 | But she has to go to physio though . |
12 | 1993 is a year to really find the right person , so it may be that an unsatisfactory relationship has to go in order for the appropriate one to come in . |
13 | The number of times she had had to go to school with no knickers on was nobody 's business , she often told her husband . |
14 | I suppose if the doctor had got his diagnosis right , then I would have had to go to hospital but it was to be another ten years before I was sent to such a place . |
15 | And in the past few years we 've had to go into clearing as most other universities would do . |
16 | He has had to go into year 5 because of the different age for secondary school here but he has coped well with it and is allowed to carry on with his own level of work . |
17 | Poor Mum , she 's had to go into hospital for an operation . |
18 | He 'll have to go without pay and I told him there and then . |
19 | It sees fiscal 1994 turnover of $1,000m , compared with $1,300m this year ; 3,300 more jobs will have to go over time . |
20 | It sees fiscal 1994 turnover of $1,000m , compared with $1,300m this year ; 3,300 more jobs will have to go over time . |
21 | Actively employed at sea for nearly twenty years , for the most part in Far Eastern seas which can legitimately be called romantic , Conrad had no need to add extra colour to his raw material , nor did he have to go beyond fact to find episodes , incidents and nuggets of action to transfer to fiction . |
22 | Jessica announced she felt pissed and would have to go onto lemonade or leave the car outside the Amsterdam all night — which raised guffaws as to what she thought she 'd find left of it the morrow — and Mallachy offered to drive it home for her for twenty quid plus his taxi back , although he did n't have a licence . |
23 | I thought I used to I used to say to her sometimes I 'll have to go off story . |
24 | We 'll have to go into setaside , which I 'm not keen on . |
25 | When people get it , they may have to go into hospital or a special home , to rest , or perhaps to stay . |
26 | This year they said she was too ‘ far gone ’ and she 'd have to go into hospital if I wanted a holiday ; getting a definite date for that was impossible so I could n't book anything . |
27 | He said : ‘ It makes sense to me to prevent ill health , so that people do n't have to go into hospital in the first place . |
28 | My plan was to take a Bachelor of Music degree — for which , at that time one did not even have to go into residence . |
29 | On the other hand , the larger the quantity ordered , the more will have to go into stock as temporarily idle resources , also a costly business . |
30 | ‘ You did not have to go into partnership with the fool . ’ |