Example sentences of "[pers pn] have go [adv prt] [verb] [art] " in BNC.
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1 | After that I realised that — like anyone else — I had to go on earning the money . |
2 | So I had to go out shoplifting every day then . |
3 | ‘ Once when all the chapels and the churches were thronged and full of singing I could have stayed because the flock was here , but now I have to go out seeking a flock . |
4 | What if you 'd gone on believing the worst of me and into the bargain you 'd ended up having to marry Janice ? |
5 | Glasser talks of her as if , in walking out , she had gone on to walk the streets . |
6 | If you have to go out to earn a living or live up to commitments and promises you should aim to get back as soon as possible . |
7 | And she 's o she 's gone on to have a , a normal little boy you see ? |
8 | We filled that and while they were eating that we kept the hay , hay , cut it through a rick , a big thin knife , you know , fill the remainder of the racks with the hay , so that by the time they 'd gone and finished that they 'd gone in to eat the hay , then we 'd got the yard free to litter it out , and to straw it on both sides , one would be on the , one down on the bottom to pull straw down into the yard , and that was . |
9 | I think they have gone off to tell the rest of their family what happened . ’ |
10 | It has gone on reducing the fantastic levels of public sector borrowing requirement that were reached under the last Government . |
11 | How , for instance , would he have gone about getting the dynamite ? ’ |
12 | After The Strutters , he had gone on to play a leading part in another sitcom . |
13 | Without any hesitation , he had gone off to confront a possible intruder . |
14 | Then he had gone off to have a full breakfast in the canteen . |
15 | What kind of a warning he could n't say , but his family noticed with alarm that he had gone out to consult the tree again . |
16 | He 's gone back to spend the night near the hospital . ’ |