Example sentences of "have go through [noun] " in BNC.
Previous page Next pageNo | Sentence |
---|---|
31 | I 've gone through phases when I had seven effects pedals in front of me and then I 've concentrated on the pedals rather than my playing , and that 's wrong . ’ |
32 | I had gone through auditions before and they were much tougher than that . |
33 | His father had been savagely beaten himself as a child , and had gone through life feeling a failure . |
34 | He had forgotten how many women MPs there were ( ‘ too damn many ’ ) , and , as with the majority of his age and class , he had gone through life deaf to the quackings of feminists . |
35 | We had gone through Mullinavat and came to a village whose name I do not know — if it ever had one . |
36 | These " no-hopers " were probably given to me because I may well have been overheard to say I did not believe that there was such a person who had gone through a-initio training as a pilot who could not get on step by step until he became an operational pilot . |
37 | This caused some confusion in the grandstands as most spectators did not realise that they had gone through Kyle and O'Grady . |
38 | Airport police confirmed Demeke had gone through security checks , dismissing reports that he had avoided them by transferring from an Oslo flight . |
39 | After returning from the United States in October 1941 Hillary had gone through Staff College , and thence to HQ Fighter Command . |
40 | through , I have to go through Michelin to get that . |
41 | ‘ But there are at Warwick and Kenilworth , and we have to go through Stratford to get there . ’ |
42 | Lasting impressions so far : the sun ( miraculously ) shining on the slopes of Dalwhinnie , far in the north , on the first leg of the journey ; stumbling across Drew from the World Cup holiday in a motorway café somewhere in England in the middle of the night ; breakfast and mineral water with Claire ( oh , it was good to see her ) in an Italian cafe near London Victoria ; people throwing up all over the joint on the Seacat crossing to Boulogne ( and me staggering about , legs way out of control , on the deck , getting soaked by the spray , saltwater taste in the mouth , and a rainbow arcing on top of the water behind the catamaran ) ; complaining English and American tourist ( ‘ It 's ridiculous that we have to go through customs — why do we have to go through customs anyway ? … ) ; terrible fatigue on the train to Paris , and temperamental French men shouting and swearing at each other in the aisle ; relief at finding Angela 's flat in Paris ; difficult negotiation of the very narrow stairwell , finally finding her way at the top on the 6th floor ; food , and wine , and a shower , and a bed-settee for the night ; Japanese tourists at Notre Dame , and a man announcing his state of poverty and homelessness on the Métro — ‘ ‘ . |
43 | It is made up by adding together the profiles corresponding to bullets which have gone through slit I and bullets which have gone through slit 2 : |
44 | It is made up by adding together the profiles corresponding to bullets which have gone through slit I and bullets which have gone through slit 2 : |
45 | Some countries , such as Mexico and Chile , have gone through periods of quite radical change , only to be followed by changing political conditions , which have led to a reversal of policy . |
46 | ‘ You know Caballeros and Bugner have gone through Kyle and O'Grady . |
47 | They have gone through privatization and ceased being Civil Servants and gone out into the cold and now they are suffering this blow , so they do , I think , deserve the most generous possible treatment . |