Example sentences of "[verb] we have to go " in BNC.

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1 We still have a six-point buffer but I expect us to have to go to the last day of the season . ’
2 It is hard work , said , ‘ but the current recession has shown we have to go out and go through it . ’
3 Now he might remember I think the court come just before the after Nicola , and the car was going to because I know we had to go on the train to Liverpool and er , I 'd got ta give evidence as well , they made such a palaver !
4 It seemed a bit lukewarm , and we felt we had to go it alone .
5 ‘ We knew we had to go off fairly fast , ’ she said .
6 Certainly we had been given dominion over them , but that did n't mean we had to go cramming their little corpses down our necks like there 's no tomorrow when soya beans and wheat mountains rise up from Mother Earth like a sign saying : Meat is Murter .
7 That does n't mean we have to go around in a great lather of gratitude all the time .
8 Three times a day , well twice a day as we were young , as we get older it was three times , it means we have to go to evening chapel as well .
9 " But I think we have to go forward and finish him off . "
10 I think we have to go back to what is the fundamental purpose of the York new settlement and that is to meet some of the development plan requirements of the Greater York area .
11 Do we have to go through all that again ! ’
12 But do we have to go to distant worlds to find other kinds of replicator and other , consequent , kinds of evolution ?
13 Why do we have to go through this sort of agony in every American Major ?
14 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 — ‘ ‘ .
15 Do we have to go in ?
16 ‘ Why do we have to go to Glastonbury ? ’
17 ‘ Why do we have to go ? ’
18 How far round do we have to go on that ?
19 Yes , can we do it by this committee , or do we have to go though .
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