Example sentences of "have [adv] [adv] go " in BNC.

  Next page
No Sentence
1 At the same time the keyboard conductor makes sure that the electrostatic charge that builds up inside you also has somewhere else to go .
2 of the posts identified , but , even though it has done very well , it has somewhat further to go .
3 Pennett was offered a one-season trial on Johnson 's recommendation , and says : ‘ It has so far gone better than I dared to hope .
4 This country has so far gone in the opposite direction .
5 All this has long since gone , and the problem of rehabilitation is immense .
6 The stones of the church are dark with age and the roof has long since gone .
7 Both of these recent releases from the duo 's Threshold House label tinker with material that has long since gone out of print in an attempt to create something else .
8 Not far from there , at 7 rue Delta , he had hired a pavilion due for demolition for these artists ( it has long since gone and been replaced by a house ) .
9 But direct observation does give you the colours and you do become more accurate , even though sunlight and shadows move so fast during the time it takes to paint such a scene that the particular arrangement that caught your eye in the first place has long since gone by the time the picture is finished !
10 The medieval castle has long since gone , its site occupied by the great house , built by Sir John Vanbrugh for the fourth Earl of Manchester between 1707–14 .
11 BRITAIN 'S ‘ greenest ’ car is the Subaru Vivio 660cc which has only just gone on sale .
12 At $5,550 , IBM Corp 's new 16″ colour Xstation 150 seems pricey , but then it 's built around the Motorola Inc 88110 which has only recently gone into volume production ( UX No 422 ) : thought to clock at 40Mhz IBM says the 150 outperforms its existing Xstation 130 by a factor of six at 115,000 Xstones , and comes with from 6Mb to 22Mb RAM .
13 A big cat that has only recently gone extinct is the sabre-tooth ( " tiger " ) , named after its colossal canine teeth which jutted down from the upper jaw in the front of what must have been a terrifying gape .
14 In this chapter you have discovered many ways in which foods containing dietary fibre can make you feel more satisfied — and the food has not yet gone down the throat .
15 Although Microsoft has not yet gone very public on it , MSDOS 6 is due by the end of March 1993 , and will include the following utilities :
16 The course has settled down but course organisation has not always gone smoothly .
17 Ipswich for example , was providing a full service and has now actually gone to the times that we 're providing .
18 ‘ She has n't exactly gone out of her way to make anybody else happy , has she ? ’
19 Men will say ‘ I love you ’ to get women into bed with them ; women will say ‘ I love you ’ to get men into marriage with them ; both will say ‘ I love you ’ to keep fear at bay , to convince themselves of the deed by the word , to assure themselves that the promised condition has arrived , to deceive themselves that it has n't yet gone away .
20 and what I was a really impressed with he , he balanced the , the human , what he felt were the human strengths of the school what it felt like you know , what the people were like in it and erm I think that 's made his decision more difficult because he has n't just gone on the ec the academic side of it he looked at the , the all round aspects of it .
21 The darkness has n't necessarily gone , but now I can live with it , instead of inside it . ’
22 ‘ It may help to remember , ’ she adds , ‘ that the man has n't necessarily gone out looking , and he might not even be conscious of what it is he wants .
23 At the same time , but separately , a Unix kernel with multi-level security enhancements , SVR4.0 MLS , was re-worked to comply with the US government Orange Book B2 security requirement — with B3 extensions — emerging as SVR4.1 ES ( though it has n't really gone out to end users yet ) .
24 what she 'd collected by saying that she has n't really gone to any
25 I know he has n't really gone to the shops .
26 Raskolnikov is young , preoccupied and merely puzzled — ‘ young , abstract and therefore cruel ’ , the severe voice of the novel descries him elsewhere — but the reader attends in tragic wonder , for he understands that Marmeladov has indeed nowhere to go , a nowhere which is the finality of his loose end , at once in character , at once personal to the selfish selfless rationale of one man 's marriage and his other circumstances , personal to his ‘ destitution ’ or ‘ extremity ’ or ‘ misère ’ ( nishcheta , which he is careful to distinguish from his poverty ) , and at the same time an objective and transpersonal theme running through all Dostoevsky 's work .
27 It was now clear that this was because an atom in its ground state has nowhere else to go , unless it can be given the rather large amount of energy necessary to lift it to an excited state with n greater than I.
28 ‘ She says she has nowhere else to go .
29 He is about sixty and they should have retired him years ago , but he has nowhere else to go .
30 For the last five years , Fortran has led a very quiet life , so quiet in fact the launch of new Fortran specifications two years ago , called Fortran90 , has pretty much gone unnoticed even by Fortran users .
  Next page