Example sentences of "have go [adv] [art] [adj] [noun] " in BNC.
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1 | A sporting fairy tale … but hold on … will Nigel and the Williams team from Oxfordshire live happily ever after … believe it or not before the bubbly has gone flat the sporting world is alive with speculation about the future of Mansell … |
2 | She was blue when they carried her in , but it looks as though the stone has gone down the right way . ’ |
3 | Yet despite these differences , English English has gone quite a long way down the road of a more-or-less Americanized professionalism , as identified and rejected in the 1960s by Leavis , Lewis , and Gardner . |
4 | ‘ If he 'd gone away a long time ago , it would have been better , ’ said Mrs Clancy wryly . |
5 | She 'd gone only a short way when some sixth sense brought her to a halt in the nick of time . |
6 | They 'd gone down a narrow alleyway — up North they 're called ‘ ginnels ’ but do n't ask me why ; I just observe , I do n't translate — which led to another alley at right-angles . |
7 | By spring of eighty-nine , when the project had started , we 'd gone quite a long way down the road , we 'd decided that we wanted to be looking at what was feasible in general practice . |
8 | But if you thought about the order that you test , then , if something does n't work , you may only have to go back a few steps and re-test . |
9 | They may have gone down the medium wave dial from 10.17 to 8.55 , but their new premises in Ludlow is more than a few steps up from the barn . |
10 | and then we 'd 've gone down a different avenue |
11 | Much of this went to Hull for export , but trains for Lancashire had to go up the formidable Worsborough bank avoiding Barnsley , and joining the main line just south of Penistone . |
12 | At ten P M she did n't seem too great either , her temperature had gone up a little bit , but nevertheless , she slept on . |
13 | That meant the police had gone up the other way — but could see them by turning . |
14 | Even if the black hole did emit the right kinds of particles , one could not tell if they were actually the same particles that had gone down the other hole . |
15 | By 10.30 he had gone down the full length of the corridor that ran past his office and he had then spent two and a half hours in H3 's laboratory . |
16 | After circling and playing together for probably a minute , the fins had lazily disappeared and Yanto had gone home a mystified man . |
17 | We had gone about a hundred yards when one particular house caught my eye . |
18 | The Central African Federation , embracing the Rhodesias and Nyasaland , had broken up under African nationalist pressures at the end of 1960 ; the West Indies Federation had gone much the same way during 1961 ; and South Africa had become a republic and left the Commonwealth that year . |
19 | Mait had gone only a short distance when he heard the faint beep from above . |
20 | But he had gone only a few paces when she called to him . |
21 | But she had gone only a few paces before she turned and stared back at the door , a strong sense of oddness — of wrongness — holding her in its grip . |
22 | He had gone only a few yards however when the horse hurled him over a precipice to his death . |
23 | She had gone only a little way however , when she stopped to check her map and , to her consternation found that when she turned the ignition on again her car would n't go ! |
24 | So I picked him up and I carried him , Dorothy had gone out the wrong door , instead of going out the door at that end she 'd gone right along this long corridor |
25 | We have to go back a little way to remember that in 1976 they presided over the most savage cuts ever imposed on the national health service . |
26 | We have gone slightly the other way with obviously robotics and the electronic age and this sort of thing . |
27 | If the previous stages have gone well the actual task of writing may now be relatively painless . |
28 | Surely it is the fact all the other counties have gone down the same road that has persuaded Yorkshire that , in order to compete on equal terms , they must follow suit . |
29 | Or bits that have gone down the wrong way ? |
30 | Okay , so she 's gone down a few orifices in her time , but if anyone calls her a hookworm I 'll burst their intestines . |