Example sentences of "[pers pn] have go on " in BNC.
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1 | If whatever happened to Summerchild that year had n't happened — if he had n't been found lying with the garbage in Spring Gardens — if Millie had n't stopped playing in the orchestra — if I 'd gone on seeing her week by week — grown up with her — become easy with her — married her — then Timmy would still have a mother at home . |
2 | But , nevertheless , for me eternity was not now , and I had to go on into the future and in this world . |
3 | We did ask Dorothy to do it after I did it for four years , but she was n't keen and I had to go on . |
4 | In the end , all I had to go on was the gallery itself . |
5 | He really wanted me to leave the Order earlier , but I said I had to go on helping . |
6 | Terrified , I stood by the stage , knowing I had to go on after them . |
7 | I had to go on . |
8 | He was so stiff , so shocked , that I had to go on . |
9 | ‘ The entries in his diary were all I had to go on . |
10 | I had to go on to the usual horror . |
11 | I dared not think how he would be if I went back then so I had to go on . |
12 | ‘ All I had to go on was the very clear excitement you displayed in that conversation on the plane . |
13 | After that I realised that — like anyone else — I had to go on earning the money . |
14 | Joanne had handled the set-up of the press conference in Glasgow and I had gone on to Newcastle Airport to meet the plane there . |
15 | If I should cry , trying to express the inexpressible , that I had walked the wind with archangels , she would have been worried and annoyed ; and if I had gone on to say that I had forfeited those heights and lived now in an unremitting shadowless glare of exposure in a runnel of Hell , she would have feared for my mental health . |
16 | After the first morning when it appeared in the garden I had gone on giving it food . |
17 | Aye , because I 've , I 've gone on for weeks with it , you |
18 | , he 's probably widdleing nothing , poor that was n't worth sitting down for , no to think that once I 've gone on , which I did on Friday , I 'm now on my way out the other end |
19 | I 've gone on to decaffeinated coffee I do drink decaffeinated |
20 | So I 've to go on |
21 | I almost feel as if I have gone on getting to know and understand her after she died , and have done my mourning as I go , whereas with my father the relationship was perfect and complete and ended with his death . ' |
22 | I have gone on to be exhibited there almost every year . |
23 | If I have to go on working I do n't see why you should n't . |
24 | ‘ Hey , if I have to go on with this much longer , I 'm going to start fancying you myself . ’ |
25 | I have to go on with this particular trip . |
26 | Since then she has gone on to create exhibitions , including Zabat — a stunning series of Blackwomen 's portraits which will be exhibited at Camerawork Gallery in London from March 15–April 19 , and has now edited Passion : Discourses on Blackwomen 's Creativity , recently published by Urban Fox Press . |
27 | I suppose what 's happened is this : he has gone on staring out of the window , thinking , and she has gone on staring at him , waiting , with such absorption that neither of them noticed the tape had run out . |
28 | If you 'd gone on . |
29 | What if you 'd gone on believing the worst of me and into the bargain you 'd ended up having to marry Janice ? |
30 | She 'd gone on into a book-lined room which appeared to be in use as an office , and she was placing the shotgun along with two others in a locking steel cabinet . |