Example sentences of "[noun sg] have go from [art] [noun] " in BNC.

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1 You 'd certainly say the heart has gone from the land hereabouts , would n't you ? ’
2 ‘ Within 30 years the brewing industry has gone from a cottage industry to high tech . ’
3 And I 'm left to wonder if a little of the sheen has gone from a club who once shone like burnished gold .
4 All the snow had gone from the tops and the sun was really warm .
5 All colour had gone from the landscape , leaving the ground a kind of shimmering , bright grey on which every bush and stunted tree appeared as a black silhouette .
6 The last glow had gone from the sunflowers now and they hung their heads on their spindly supports .
7 Now the grey dew had gone from the grass , pats of dung steamed where the cattle had been standing , and Cameron , in his shirt-sleeves with a cloth tying back his long black hair , was supervising the winching up of timbers for the roof .
8 Outside , the gate had gone from the basement steps , and the slanting roof of the coal hole had fallen in , but when he looked he could see the chafed paint , those marks on the rusted railings , where once he had padlocked his motorcycle .
9 It fell to the diminutive and very tired Mr Havel to declare that a message had gone from the Forum to Presidents George Bush and Mikhail Gorbachev , urging them to look closely at 1968 and the invasion when they meet next month .
10 All my bloody furniture 's gone from the living I went upstairs the lot 's gone !
11 Her black hat with the little veil had gone from the shelf , and her best peep-toe shoes .
12 The look is dazzling but transient ; in three wearings and a press the stiffness has gone from the material and the cool pastels are greyed .
13 A small clock had gone from the sitting room , and a watch in a slightly mildewed case .
14 Suddenly all the magic had gone from the night and all her previous fears returned .
15 The atmosphere had gone from the house .
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