Example sentences of "have go [adv prt] [prep] [art] [noun] " in BNC.

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1 Speaking after delivering an emotional tribute to his party workers , he said : ‘ There 's a great deal of serious reflection that has to go on in the opposition parties , but I 've no doubt that most of the reflection has to take place within Labour and it has to take place on the subject of PR .
2 Speaking after delivering an emotional tribute to his party workers , he said : ‘ There 's a great deal of serious reflection that has to go on in the opposition parties , but I 've no doubt that most of the reflection has to take place within Labour and it has to take place on the subject of PR .
3 He says he 's feeling better but he has to go back to the hospice .
4 Both were successful in their task , Phyllisia no longer has to go back to the West Indies and Celie was reunited with all her family .
5 The twentieth-century preference for ‘ the colloquial ’ in poetry may well be a temporary phenomenon ; Donald Davie 's Purity of Diction in English Verse ( 1952 ) , together with his admiration for the late Augustans , represent one attempt to revive an interest in the use of a ‘ civilized ’ diction ; it is interesting that he has to go back to the age before Wordsworth .
6 For comparison , one really has to go back to the Renaissance , to someone like Giovanni Bellini , who travelled an enormous territory ; even to Giotto , the artist who Matisse said was the peak of his aspiration .
7 In the meantime he has to go back to the town on further business , but first his horse needs shoeing , his cart needs repairing and he needs food and shelter .
8 ‘ We 've only got her for five years , then she has to go back to the Foundling Hospital . ’
9 He is n't allowed to play football and has to go back to the hospital for treatment .
10 Danny has to go down on the floor , put his hands on hips and go , evening all !
11 Suppose the night porter has gone through to the kitchen to make a sandwich .
12 Do you know , I do n't think I 've ever seen that before where the robin has gone up onto the seeds
13 Robert Gate has gone up in the world , and no one deserves it more .
14 So Batty really has gone up in the world — from 4–3 against the ( old , great ) Liverpool at Elland Road two years ago to a 4–3 thriller against a club ninth in the fourth division .
15 What I want to make sure first of all is that erm you understand what has gone on before the scene that we actually want to find ourselves in .
16 IN THE first part of this book Michael Shallis gives an interesting non-technical account of how modern physics has gone on from the common-sense notion of time to a whole series of fundamental changes .
17 It would be absurd to adopt a rigidly determinist view of what has gone on in the formation of culturally transmitted marriage laws .
18 This remedy may come up after a Belladonna sore throat has gone down on the chest .
19 No one has ever given a satisfactory explanation of why Mr Ford said what he said — and it has gone down in the history books as just another Ford pratfall .
20 Mark Frost has gone back as a bowler , though of course he could come again .
21 Fred Couples , the Americans ' man of the season so far but who did not play last week , has gone back to the top amid a wholesale reshuffle .
22 ‘ Why , Rohan has gone back to the Haut-Médoc .
23 The Government has gone back to the Appeal COurt tonight in a second attempt to stop Central Television screening the first filmed interview with mass murderer Dennis Nilsen .
24 Hypnotists working for the police ask an individual , most commonly a witness or a victim , to imagine that he has gone back to the time of the crime .
25 The actor who played Dirty Den in Eastenders has gone back to the prison where he was once an inmate .
26 Now it has gone back towards the middle and as of this moment , drug abuse worldwide is worse than ever . ’
27 Local accountability has gone out of the window ; Ministers no longer even talk about it , because they know that it is not a reality .
28 We believe that the principle of accountability in local democracy has gone out of the window under this Government .
29 hurricane has gone out of the news now , once something like that has happened there 's always another disaster coming behind that actually takes over the headlines , so , about six months , a year , two years afterwards they were still finding that in parts of Europe the general level of nuclear activity was higher than it had been before Chernobyl , why would that happen ?
30 ‘ The reason we have had so many problems of late is that the fizz has gone out of the market , ’ Abrahams says .
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