Example sentences of "have [adv] go to the " in BNC.
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1 | The tour 's prestige refereeing appointment , the Barbarians game at Twickenham on 25 November , has rightly gone to the world 's best , Clive Norling . |
2 | Zimbabwe , we are told , has already gone to the dogs . |
3 | The full range of objects from their sumptuous commemorative catalogue is not included ( the Sebastiano del Piombo of Pope Clement VII , for example , has already gone to the Getty Museum ) , apparently due to the ongoing likelihood of sales . |
4 | Our programme has already gone to the printers . |
5 | This letter has also gone to the district council in East Hampshire — Editor . |
6 | Mr Habibullah is still missing , the matter has now gone to the Lahore High Court , and the assembly 's fate will be decided when Mr Sharif 's friends produce the unfortunate Mr Habibullah next week . |
7 | In an essay written with Watt in 1963 ( in Goody , ed. 1968 ) , Goody sets out to counter-balance the relativism of his colleagues in anthropology which , he feels , ‘ has now gone to the point of denying that the distinction between non-literate and literate societies has any significant validity ’ . |
8 | Numerous trials have evaluated the various procedures performed during pregnancy and labour ( Iain Chalmers has even gone to the trouble of collating them ) but very few of these ideas have changed obstetric practice . |
9 | If one cuts through all the technicalities and complexities of the document , which has actually gone to the Social Security Advisory Committee , it is perfectly clear that that was the core intention behind the Government 's move . |
10 | Christmas has definitely gone to the dogs — at least in novelist Jilly Cooper 's latest bedroom scene . |
11 | Anyway , I suppose I 'd better go to the surgery , if I must see him . ’ |
12 | ‘ He 'd better go to the zoo and live with the animals . |
13 | tablets are finished , I 'd better go to the doc |
14 | " I think I 'd better go to the loo , " she said , then looked at him . |
15 | ‘ You 'd better go to the doctor , ’ said Apricot . |
16 | I 'd better go to the embassy to check if anything 's actually happened today . |
17 | K. R. Whenever they had a raid on the Chinese gambling , they took them all in the cells and they all sent out for Chinese meals , and when they 'd all gone to the Main Bridewell in the middle of the night — ‘ 125 , scrub out ! ’ — and I had to take my tunic off and scrub out after the Chinese had been . |
18 | And you 'd best go to the toilet before you leave . |
19 | He 'd always gone to the fields long before Edward was up for school , but today he was still wrapping his lunchtime bread and cheese in a cloth . |
20 | I 'd even gone to the trouble of finding a real piece of rattan jog — the dried bark which gives a deep red colour to the dish — in the fifth Punjabi deli I 'd tried . |
21 | So people who 'd either gone to the football or |
22 | ‘ They 've all gone to the funeral , ’ said Lydia . |
23 | Scouts had only to go to the North-east , the Birmingham area or any of the thickly populated districts to discover several players almost up to the top League standard . |
24 | And some teams had better go to the old barn . |
25 | Shelley had already gone to the patient and was holding the swollen ankle . |
26 | In God 's purposes Jesus had already gone to the cross , he was alre , hi his , his natural fate if you like , was already sealed , he had come for this purpose , he had come to die . |
27 | Billy was fairly sure that Harriet had not gone to the river simply to get a drink and that a stronger instinct was governing her behaviour . |
28 | She was certain MacQuillan had not gone to the bar because she had been there all the time until then . |
29 | She hoped he had not gone to the further fields . |
30 | Mr Abramson , of Shirley Road , Allerton , said last night : ‘ I had just gone to the off-licence to help my daughter Trudie while her husband went for his tea . |