Example sentences of "he have go [adj] " in BNC.
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1 | Couples , on the other hand , has finished no higher than fifth on his eight appearances , though he has gone all four rounds in each . |
2 | Little Polveir does not get warmed up until he has gone three miles and Toby Balding has been training him specifically with Saturday in mind . |
3 | Capped for the All Blacks against France about six years ago , McPherson , 30 , actually brought the birth certificates of his Scottish grand-parents with him , but much to his regret he has gone un-noticed by the Scottish selectors . |
4 | But he has to go some to outshine Dean Richards , dropped for the second time in a year . |
5 | He 'd gone all defensive . |
6 | He 'd gone short and the trouble was — she pegged his flannel pyjamas to the frame — that he did n't seem to care . |
7 | It was quieter , with few shops , not one of them interesting , and restaurants which opened with optimistic flourishes and invitations but where , after a few weeks , you could see the desolate owner standing in the doorway wondering where he 'd gone wrong ; his eyes told you the area was n't going to revive in his lifetime . |
8 | Maybe he 'd gone mad . |
9 | She wondered whether he 'd gone mad , and panicked . |
10 | Since Mandy had died , he 'd gone soft , he admitted that . |
11 | He was the nastiest , really dangerous because he felt he had to go that extra distance . |
12 | Then , on the other hand he had to go short indoors , well then when the I er th th , th er the interest went up , cos he ! |
13 | She had not told her son to keep away from the course because she had not been aware that he had gone that way . |
14 | Within two weeks , the Palmers brought Christopher to Ealing hospital , saying he had gone blue , stopped breathing and had blood round his nose . |
15 | He hung on to the semicircular rail around the outer edge , where they were standing because the businessmen who had got in after them had jostled them there , and she saw that his eyes were closed and that he had gone gray with fear about the drop . |
16 | Yesterday , or was it the day before yesterday , or when was it , he had gone first up the ladder on to Lord Jim , but Nenna had gone first into the cabin . |
17 | Bardely intercepted him before he had gone many yards … |
18 | Debbie 's husband would have cared if he had gone short , oh yes . |
19 | He had gone clean and sober with a fury , he swore , up at five-thirty every morning to work out at the Y , at his word processor to write by six-thirty , stopping only to watch CNN during lunch ‘ to connect with the world ’ . |
20 | He had gone 3 , 2 at the 11th and 12th , then followed it with a three at the 14th , where he hit an eight-iron to a yard . |
21 | He leaned heavily upon her arm , with a shambling lameness which was only half assumed , for he had gone barefoot for three weeks before he reached the refuge from which Iago had conveyed him west to Shrewsbury . |
22 | But she and Matthew had had so many cold steely little tussles these last few weeks over so many small things — like the panelling in the hall and cutting some trees down at the side of the house which she said darkened the drawing-room and which he had gone berserk about — that Sara did not feel she could be obstructive again . |
23 | He had gone crazy ! |
24 | As soon as you had a break in your ploughing you 'd walk along the headlings to have a look at your neighbour 's work , to see where he had gone wrong , or if his ploughing was better than yours . |
25 | He had gone white , she remembered , had said he had made a terrible mistake . |
26 | She knew he did n't escape : perhaps he had gone mad , a gibbering idiot in the middle of that room , in the dark , with those doors opening and closing all around him . |
27 | Surrey had made 92 for three when Stuart suddenly declared — we thought he had gone mad . |
28 | Mrs Stych opened her eyes slowly and looked at him as if he had gone mad . |
29 | Violet looked at Patrick as if he had gone mad . |
30 | The first point which everybody had overlooked was that Wordsworth hoped ‘ to make money ’ with Lyrical Ballads , and presumably thought that he had gone some way in making concessions to popular taste . |