Example sentences of "[vb mod] have go to [noun sg] " in BNC.
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1 | I think she must 've gone to town |
2 | ‘ I still feel he should have gone to university like the other two . |
3 | She said the man , who admitted attempting to have sex with her when she was eight , should have gone to prison for two or three years . |
4 | Should have gone to college , really , with a talent like that . ’ |
5 | Many thought it a cruel injustice that Julian should have to go to prison at all . |
6 | ‘ But you must have gone to school . ’ |
7 | Along with many a public body that felt pushed around by the Tories , the BBC must have gone to bed on April 8 with dreams of a quieter life on the night ; already swinging , as it were , in the hammock slung for them by a hung parliament . |
8 | She must have gone to bed some time ago , else Jessie would n't have been able to sneak out . |
9 | His mother must have gone to bed . |
10 | He must have gone to bed with her . |
11 | Only the hall light was on , Helen saw ; Edward must have gone to bed — or at any rate was in his room . |
12 | At some point , Marjorie must have gone to bed ; finishing an account of a ceremonial circumcision he had attended , Nick had glanced abstractedly in her direction and been surprised to find her gone . |
13 | He must have gone to sleep at last for the next thing he heard was his alarm clock . |
14 | Now then we 'll have to go to Nana 's in about ten minutes Katie . |
15 | ( Dolefully ) I suppose we 'll have to go to sleep . |
16 | ‘ You 'll have to go to school . |
17 | I would n't even go to limbo , Bernard , because I know about Him and have n't converted : I 'll have to go to hell . |
18 | She 'll have to go to town near Dudley . |
19 | ‘ I might have to go to court . ’ |
20 | I could 've gone to hospital |
21 | Well , it was the last straw , apparently , to be told by this cultivated , clean , excessively reasonable , and controlled favourite son , in these hideous surroundings , that Vincent really should n't have come here ; that it was more foolishness , another dead-end , when he could have gone to university and made everyone happy , including himself . |
22 | If she could have gone to bed with him at that moment it would have been all right . |
23 | The last time , he could have gone to prison . |
24 | I 'd have to go to Parliament and bribe them to pass a law specially for my divorce . ’ |
25 | Those books Thérèse read too but pretended she did n't because then she 'd have to go to confession about them and spell out exactly what she 'd thought . |
26 | And if you were on night duty you 'd get two nights off , but when you came back you 'd , you 'd , you 'd have to be on duty that night so you 'd have to go to bed that day . |
27 | Nine o'clock and I 'd have to go to bed ! |
28 | I thought you 'd have gone to bed . ’ |
29 | I think , if I had n't been there , she 'd have gone to sleep right away . |
30 | All this evidence strongly suggests that ( h ) has been a variable in English for many centuries : [ h ] -loss may have gone to completion in some varieties at particular times and places , but in general speech communities have used the variation over these centuries for stylistic and social marking . |