Example sentences of "[adj] [noun sg] have go [prep] a " in BNC.

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1 A TOP architectural award has gone to a town CAR PARK .
2 The then modish humanity had gone into a violent reaction against the ancient severity , ‘ and might almost be supposed to see in the fact of having lost or squandered other people 's property a peculiar title to indulgence . ‘
3 The law says that British Coal has to go through a procedure of consultation before it can close pits .
4 Thus there could be no economies of scale in case a sleeve cut from one lay of medium blue had to go with a dress cut from another lay of so-called medium blue .
5 De Gaulle reacted like a sullen schoolboy ; the august professor had gone for a while .
6 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 .
7 Stupid burk had gone on a crane like that
8 Because the bus had no radio or mobile telephone the civilian driver had to go to a nearby farmhouse to call the police .
9 McLeish , who remembered that she had been left £200,000 outright , received this as further evidence that the young woman had gone into a massive sulk after her uncle 's unexpected death .
10 In the two years since the idea of a European bank was first mooted , the Soviet Union has gone from a net contributor to the bank 's budget to potentially its largest beneficiary .
11 In a report published in July 1991 the OECD found that " the economies of the old federal Länder … have exhibited a remarkably high degree of resilience and strength , combining faster growth with maintenance of low inflation , while the five new Länder have gone through a period of severe adjustment , involving in its initial stage heavy output and employment losses " .
12 In the last twelve months , the number of heterosexuals contracting AIDS has gone from a hundred and twenty three to two hundred and forty .
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