Example sentences of "have [verb] through [noun sg] " in BNC.

  Next page
No Sentence
1 For the purposes of this essay I will concentrate on associative learning which covers what is popularly defined as learning , as opposed to genetic learning which is instinctual , hereditary behaviour that has developed through evolution .
2 Most additional public-sector investment has come through capital allowances .
3 Perhaps , the greatest shift in offering support to families has come through awareness of the need to work in partnership with parents and for specialist and intervention services to work more within community and across agency settings .
4 Adrian says they 've spent a lot of time in the water … tweaking this and tweaking that and making sure that it has come through production with flying colours …
5 Even though he has pushed through legislation to outlaw the ‘ sow pen ’ the government is allowing eight years for it to be passed out .
6 Obviously the gap between the two has grown through time .
7 He adds , ‘ Whereas in other countries in Europe , EDS has grown through acquisition , in Spain it 's been through knocking on doors and selling the business . ’
8 Gower has seen through Pistol , and Fluellen vows revenge should he be abused .
9 The Andrex puppy has scampered through house and garden , fields and even a maze in a string of TV adverts , tugging the tissue behind him .
10 Tinbergen argued that rapid cultural change may have pushed human systems into an environment which is no longer that to which the species has adapted through evolution .
11 Experience in the laboratory or in the field gives those who do not intend to undertake research as a career the opportunity to learn how their subject has progressed through experiment .
12 SLUMP is where the recession is heading to once it has gone through depression .
13 He who has gone through life without being tested is one who had been considered unworthy ever to gain the victory over fortune .
14 Our sportsdesk can detect from the far end of a crease someone who has gone through life under the impression that Bodyline may refer to a one-piece undergarment .
15 Stephen has gone through confession , and is , he declares , ‘ Ready to forge that language ’ , but he declares it in a language that will not yet take Joyce out of desperation .
16 My essential points are that ( 1 ) to judge from a variety of sources including pendulum marks , timings , metronome marks and evidence from automatic mechanical instruments , the minuet , like the waltz and many other dances , has gone through history at a variety of simultaneous paces , some of which have been indeed quite fast .
17 Your puppy is now a young mature adult and let us assume he has gone through puppyhood with no problems .
18 I think history has done this , and by history I mean everything which has worked through history to produce that result — geography , climate , agriculture , economics .
19 The contemporary hooligan phenomenon arose in the 1960s at a time of unprecedented prosperity and low unemployment and has continued through recession both in the depressed north and the relatively prosperous south .
20 Once the patient has passed through casualty and becomes a coronary care admission the pain has usually eased significantly .
21 As the holiday-maker travels further and learns more of the possibilities the world has to offer through travel books , magazines and television , travel companies are creating more and more imaginative and flexible packages .
22 Sir : Uppark is the third great house which the National Trust has lost through fire since the last war .
23 There is little evidence to support the suggestion that colour and banding in Nucella has arisen through selection for crypsis .
24 Erm the report identifies the history of the committee and outlines the benefits that Harlow has achieved through membership .
25 Blinkered and self-serving as this picture may appear ( it entirely ignores the gains which the USSR has achieved through war ) , it will be clear on reflection that what is meant by ‘ peace ’ is conflict without war : or , to invert these terms , ‘ a form of warfare which permits the settlement of unavoidable clashes between Socialism and Capitalism without having recourse to general armed conflict , ( author 's italics ) .
26 Rosemary Reynolds ( Mrs Wolfson ) , a social worker , writes : ‘ My career has evolved through work with children and families , adoption and fostering , to my current work as a Guardian ad litem ’ , and she has just obtained a Diploma in Child Protection from London University .
27 Too many British rap tracks try and copy American stuff , but our sound has evolved through time and we keep branching into different styles . ’
28 ‘ The first time she went out in it she came back into the house giggling that she 'd driven through town with the top down , even though it was freezing .
29 Once again each man visited with his own buddies that they 'd gone through training with here in the States , so we feel very much attached to the Hundredth Bomb Group and .
30 And there were the prizes I 'd accumulated through primary , books for Good Attendance or General Merit , in which I usually came top girl .
  Next page