Example sentences of "have go through a " in BNC.

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1 Anyone nominated for a partnership now has to go through a two-day assessment and take part in simulated exercises that test the ability to display initiative in seeking new business .
2 In a hidden variable theory , with everything determinate , each electron in the two-slit experiment of Chapter 4 has to go through a definite slit .
3 If a report has to go through a number of drafts , it is an excellent way of enabling changes to be made quickly and without extensive retyping .
4 The law says that British Coal has to go through a procedure of consultation before it can close pits .
5 Fusion has gone through a number of different phases .
6 Evode has gone through a sticky patch .
7 St Matthew 's School has gone through a difficult patch in the last few years .
8 The imager was selected from six finalists of the 1991 competition and has gone through a two-year production stage to prove its commercial viability .
9 The Women 's Movement in Ireland has gone through a number of different phases .
10 The thing has gone through a tidal change and we know pay attention to the views of women themselves .
11 FRENCH R&D has gone through an irreversible change even though budgetary ‘ rigour ’ looks certain to clip the massive spending central to the government 's strategy to encourage research , development and high technology industry .
12 You know we have had , as you saw , hundreds and hundreds of amendments and the thing has gone through an enormous process of of er consideration .
13 Japan 's exporters have already had to go through a punishing belt-tightening , prompted by the yen 's steep rise against the dollar after 1985 .
14 I 've had to go through a funeral .
15 A successful team may have to go through a number of fights during the course of a day 's competition so it is not at all unusual to see teams short-handed through injury in the final stages .
16 He could be more personal now that he did n't have to go through a nosy newspaper office .
17 I certainly would not advocate as many in rugby union , but a maximum of one per team seems perfectly reasonable , and they should not have to go through a qualifying period .
18 As before , however , she will have to go through a phantom pregnancy as a result of this treatment .
19 But often we would n't get that straight away ; we 'd have to go through a few guitars before we found the combination of guitar and amp and EQ on the desk .
20 As you do n't have to go through a minor interval just go one semitone lower and
21 He claimed there should be no erosion of traditional fishing areas , and stressed that each application would have to go through a long process before being granted .
22 He moved up to the counter with the air of a man who does n't like having to go through a routine once again but is prepared to do so , all right then here 's my card if you insist !
23 Not even my job is worth having to go through a repeat of that ! ’
24 She must have gone through a terrible period in her life ; looking back , she genuinely believed it to be worse than it really was .
25 Gunn argues that Nina should have gone through a second , refurbishing phase , to bring it in line with the German accelerator , Desy .
26 In an attempt to find a model of the universe in which many different initial configurations could have evolved to something like the present universe , a scientist at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology , Alan Guth , suggested that the early universe might have gone through a period of very rapid expansion .
27 But Viola had reassumed all her wonted , iron-clad voluptuousness , and only her reddened eyes — had they , Greg wondered , been rubbed since she saw him coming up the path ? — suggested that she might have gone through a frightening or saddening time .
28 ‘ I 'm so glad , ’ Leith replied , knowing from the very few comments Rosemary had let drop that she must have gone through a most unhappy time before Derek had finally left .
29 In Three Men in a Boat he tells how , having gone through a medical dictionary at the British Museum — to check if he had hayfever — he decided he had everything in the book except housemaids knee .
30 This enabled each bottle to start in an almost horizontal position , but finish perpendicular having gone through a full 90° of movement without leaving the hole .
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