Example sentences of "have go [art] [adj] [noun] " in BNC.

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1 A long time in the dark and he d have to go a long way round if he was n't to upset the sheep and alert Jack .
2 ‘ We have to go a long way south before we get to Alaska , ’ he said .
3 It will create interest in the foreground which I think is important and often , especially looking across water an expanse of water if you have n't got any interesting detail in the foreground yo you have to go a long way into the picture before it begins to get interesting .
4 I only have to go a few quid over and I get snooty letters threatening to take it off me .
5 There has been so much interest in the industrial side , while you just have to go a few miles out of Middlesbrough to get to the coast or the middle of the moors . ’
6 There has been so much interest in the industrial side while you just have to go a few miles out of Middlesbrough to get to the coast or the middle of the moors . ’
7 If you ca n't , if you ca n't get home if you have to go the that play , give me ring .
8 You have to go the scenic route and learn things that way . ’
9 The Thatcher governments have gone a long way towards puncturing claims about the power of the unions .
10 Modern petrological studies have gone a long way towards answering this question : polished hard-rock axes seem to have been made from stone obtained from a limited number of outcrops .
11 If we can achieve this , we have gone a long way towards solving the axe typology problem since groups of similarly shaped axes would appear as distinct clusters on the page and could be easily identified by eye .
12 He is still extremely grateful to the SMH , though his results on behalf of the paper since have gone a long way to repaying any debt of gratitude .
13 The new , improved materials available have gone a long way towards extending the lifespan of today 's flat roof .
14 The efforts of Anthony Thompson and his friends , including contingents of willing helpers provided by the St Bede 's Link with Romania , have gone a long way towards enabling Lotsi to achieve his goal and the project has now reached the stage where it will benefit from a greater degree of organisation than has been necessary so far .
15 The French have gone a long way towards providing a road and water supply and members of the ‘ Pater Nostra ’ organisation are studying in Budapest , Vienna and Germany to obtain qualifications in medicine , physiotherapy , occupational therapy and other skills which will enable them to provide the day-to-day care of the residents in the future .
16 But I have gone a long way from my original fine lace and the number of strokes of the lace carriage .
17 Certainly we have gone a long way to improve the ‘ traditional ’ British Rail sandwich . ’
18 The transactions completed to date have gone a considerable way towards achieving these objectives .
19 And we felt that team two have gone the other way , tha that the work spread out and actually when you looked at the , at the project plan at the back , erm that in fact a surveyor was out for six hundred and eighty three DOPACS units which is about ten days and that had spread all through May , June and July .
20 But if the means of communication have moved in a more public direction , the images have gone the other way .
21 Out have gone the autumnal shades , in have come bold contrasts of saturated reds and greens .
22 Many organizations have gone the whole way and created entirely different systems for each of these needs .
23 Cider and culinary apple orchards have gone the same way , all helped along until a few years ago by government grants to grub up the old trees and replace them with easy to spray , prune and pick bush types .
24 There is ample room within the synaptic interactions of even 20,000 neurons for their properties to be those of the system rather than of its individual cells , and claims which were once popular that within insect and crustacean nervous systems one could find key ‘ command ’ neurons have gone the same way as , in eastern Europe , parallel enthusiasm for ‘ command economies ’ — that is , they turn out to be not a good way to organize individual behaviour any more than to run a country .
25 ] Will the ‘ Twelve ’ have established a relatively open trading relationship with the rest of the world or will it , accepting that a common external tariff will remain , have gone the opposite way and created a protectionist Europe what is often referred to as Fortress Europe ?
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