Example sentences of "have [verb] through [art] [noun] [prep] " in BNC.
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1 | How he must have stared through the grid at freedom , and squinted hopelessly at the waxed wingnuts securing the gate of his oubliette . |
2 | A successful team may have to go through a number of fights during the course of a day 's competition so it is not at all unusual to see teams short-handed through injury in the final stages . |
3 | He 'd had another sleepless night and ahead lay customs , who could n't be expected to be exactly pro-British , and because of post and telephone strikes in Argentina , he had n't been able to confirm the flight with Alejandro , so they 'd have to go through the hassle of hiring a car to drive the 330 kilometres out to his estancia . |
4 | Nor do you have to go through the formality of claiming relief on it . |
5 | We will review the decision on an annual basis as our video list grows — maybe producing a series of loop tapes each one covering a particular sector of the market so that customers interested in adult/business English videos do n't have to sit through a section on ‘ watch with mother ’ levels . |
6 | They will also have to work through the consequences of other British racisms , especially towards Jewish people and the Irish , and the realignment of older Western Islamic polarities in the context of the Rush die scandal . |
7 | ‘ A man like you might have looked through the screens of the rickshaw ; might have counted the time it took to reach the place , calculated the direction in which you were taken . ’ |
8 | They may have risen through the ranks of secretarial work or come from journalism . |
9 | ‘ And as it takes half an hour to drive to Royal Wrigglesworth we must assume that Sir Vivien 's Lagonda would have driven through the village at about eight . ’ |
10 | The route of the planned Hereford by-pass would have run through the valley of the River Lugg , east of the city , rich in tarditional wetland plants . |
11 | In an attempt to find a model of the universe in which many different initial configurations could have evolved to something like the present universe , a scientist at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology , Alan Guth , suggested that the early universe might have gone through a period of very rapid expansion . |
12 | This will help as the experienced school librarian will already have gone through the process of justifying and acquiring a microcomputer and can anticipate the types of questions which might be asked by senior staff in the school . |
13 | The rivet would have gone through the tang of the triangular-shaped blade and acted as a pivot point . |
14 | During the silence that followed , the same thought may well have passed through every head except Ferryman 's : ‘ We 're in for it now ’ . |
15 | The road would have passed through the vicinity of the Dzanga-Ndoki national park and the Dzanga-Sangha forest reserve , which is being conserved by a £14.3 million World Bank project . |
16 | Similar thoughts must have passed through the minds of spectators when the V16 BRM made its long-awaited race debut at Silverstone 's International Trophy in August 1950 . |
17 | Those seeking authenticity would have to leaf through the book in a wind-blasted , refrigerated decompression chamber in full climbing gear , with a heavy rucksack and working a treadmill ; all in an atmosphere adjusted to one third normal sea-level density . |