Example sentences of "[verb] gone to [art] [noun] [prep] " in BNC.

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1 Now she has gone to a post at Hendon responsible for training new recruits .
2 For the first time in the history of the Beaubourg , the presidency has gone to a representative of the museum world , rather than to a high-ranking official from the Ministry of Culture .
3 Mr Lawrie , who now lives at Dunshalt in Fife , has gone to the Court of Session in Edinburgh to clear his name following allegations levelled at him after the bank 's crash .
4 Anna has gone to the movies with Mark , one of The Gang .
5 Ixos 's interest in NT stems from its 32-bit architecture , and Microsoft has gone to the lengths of creating a system with a sufficiently large directory to cater for both Intel Corp iAPX-86-based systems and Ixos 's archive system .
6 The evidence has gone to the DPP as part of an interim report .
7 His wife Margaret had n't been there ; she 'd gone to a meeting of her rock garden club .
8 They 'd gone to the barn with David Harper , Daniel Winter and Wisdom Smith after an evening at the pub .
9 " He could have given me a ticking off , considering that he 'd gone to the trouble of telling me that you were coming .
10 Ralph and Bernie must have gone to a lot of trouble to set him up .
11 He was in any case visibly touched that I should have gone to the lengths of copying the essay ; but in those days no other method of putting him in possession of it was available .
12 It was about it was the same as I 'd probably got if I 'd have gone to the pit at fourteen . .
13 Did n't know why Summerchild should have gone to the Admiralty on the morning of June 24th , but his work was related to conditions of employment in the Civil Service and involved liaison with other departments , so nothing particularly surprising about it …
14 There 's a lot of people who er do n't , who would not have gone to the bother of going into the shop and buying a one pound or two pound or four pound
15 Hard though he tried , Floyd could make nothing of the inward half and Couples , having gone to the front with a birdie at the ninth , was never caught again .
16 You might then find that having gone to the trouble of preparing a good speech and a joke just in case , you decide that you might as well give the speech anyway !
17 They 've gone to a matinee of Starlight Express .
18 We 've gone to a lot of trouble here to promote good relations with the local community and I 'm not going to have all that good work vitiated by a totally unnecessary legal action , particularly not now when work will soon begin on the new reactor . ‘
19 ‘ You 've gone to a lot of trouble , ’ he said , opening it out .
20 You 've gone to a lot of trouble . ’
21 I wonder how many times in the past , when you 've been staying here , you 've gone to the trouble of escorting Kirsty to school ? ’
22 This is believed to be the first time that an attempt has been made to compile a complete statistical record of Soviet economic development assistance to the less developed countries since it started on a formal basis in 1954 ; by 1983 such assistance had gone to a total of 57 countries .
23 However , on the advice of an acquaintance , she had gone to a clinic in Pennsylvania : she retired there periodically now .
24 Signe had gone to a lot of trouble to make Harvey feel he was back home in America .
25 Edward had gone to a meeting of the local ornithological society .
26 Jonathan had gone to a flat in Malvern with three friends .
27 Mrs Leyshon told the court how she and Stokle had gone to a house in Staunton to meet Evans and Stroud .
28 The woman who died , Gillian Haynes , from Pershore in Worcestershire , had gone to a house in the town to collect her daughter from a party .
29 Gore had gone to a house in Bath to stay the night with friends .
30 The British authorities , responding to an anonymous phone call , had gone to a roadside in Buckinghamshire and there found Simon Cormack dead .
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