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

  Next page
No Sentence
1 I do n't think so she 's erm slow , she 's , she 's like erm , she has to go to a special school
2 Hereford and Worcester has already voted for a similar ban , Northamptonshire 's decision only has to go to the full council , and Gloucestershire votes next week .
3 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 .
4 The hon. Gentleman is also mistaken because he has ignored the fact that in the past three years alone , £10 million of Department of Trade and Industry money has gone to the assisted area in west Cornwall .
5 IBM Corp has gone to the Distributed Computing Solutions arm of General Atomics Inc , San Diego for its UniTree file and storage management software ‘ for use and distribution on the entire line of IBM computers , ’ although it seems likely that it will be confined to running under Unix for now .
6 Dynafit has gone to the Swiss boot company Raichle and Kastle is currently for sale .
7 A convicted armed robber has gone to the High Court in Edinburgh to ask that special legal powers be used to re-examine his case .
8 Among the items saved was a portrait of Lord Liverpool by Sir Thomas Lawrence , which did not appear in the catalogue and which has gone to the National Portrait Gallery .
9 Mary says now : ‘ Accessing my past lives has been of great benefit and I 'm sure that if I 'd gone to an ordinary therapist , nothing would have been sorted out . ’
10 You know when we came back the next Saturday as we 've gone through the front door , he 'd gone to the Little Chef for breakfast because there were n't any crocks left to u , to use
11 The last time she and Arnie had eaten out they 'd gone to the local curry house where they went about four times a year .
12 She laughed happily , remembering the pains she 'd gone to the previous evening .
13 ‘ The challengers have always had to go to the other side of the Atlantic now it 's their turn to come to England .
14 ‘ The challengers have always had to go to the other side of the Atlantic now it 's their turn to come to England .
15 ‘ The greatest thing is telling him there is no point going to his mainstream school any longer if he is not going to get around and that he 'll have to go to a special school — at which point he explodes in terror and starts to make special efforts .
16 If they can not agree it will have to go to a public inquiry .
17 There will then be another round of letters , known as ‘ reasoned opinions ’ , after which , if no deal is struck , the matter could have to go to the European Court of Justice .
18 The 31-year-old from Malahide near Dublin lies 131st in this season 's money list and if he fails to move into the top 120 in the two months that remain he will have to go to the European tour qualifying school for the first time .
19 No , because we do n't have to go to the legal office or to school to teach for 50 hours a week in between ’ .
20 You will have to go to the local council offices yourself to find out what plans are on the horizon .
21 Well you do n't have to go to the wild west , just head for ’ them thar hills ’ and a riding school where you can learn all the skills you 'll need to feel completely at home on the range .
22 Then it would have to go to the Senior Management Committee for approval .
23 Claydon has made no secret of the fact that his immediate goal is to win enough to secure a Tour Card for 1990 without having to go to the Qualifying School at La Manga .
24 Like , in England we 'd never have gone to a domestic dispute unless a crime had been committed .
25 And as for letting go of what he had , he would have gone to every possible shift first .
26 The few Communists , Fascist and Stop-the War candidates who ignored the truce were badly defeated until towards the end of the war when the newly formed Commonwealth began to win seats which might otherwise have gone to the Labour Party .
27 This was important to the early Christians because they faced the charges that Jesus was not really dead when he was taken down from the cross and that , even if he was , the women could have gone to the wrong tomb on the Sunday morning .
28 ‘ They say you should have gone to the very top in the army after the war but you were stopped .
29 You could pick up a seat by knowing the right people , having gone to the right school or being thought to be worth a few thousand — almost the first question put to the prospective MP for Richmond , Sir George Harvie-Watt , when he went up before the local selection committee in 1937 was whether he would subscribe £700 to the local association .
30 Now if anything had been wrong with this shaft we used to have to go to the other shaft and ride that rope you see ?
  Next page