Example sentences of "[that] [pers pn] have [verb] through " in BNC.

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1 ‘ It meant that I 'd got through all my policies … [ they ] all had a little bit of fun and expression and there was no change in policy .
2 More sophisticated , more polite , perhaps ; but ‘ easier ’ suggested that I had to pass through some ordeal .
3 It means that I have to work through these guys .
4 People that I have known through the years in the music business always knew where to find me and I never moved address .
5 She was glancing through a newssheet that she had looked through already a dozen times and that in any case told nothing particularly interesting .
6 ‘ The first time she went out in it she came back into the house giggling that she 'd driven through town with the top down , even though it was freezing .
7 Much better to make it clear from the start that you 've seen through them , and you still fancy them rotten .
8 It 's all this sort of the bias that you 've got through how you 've worked things , and fiddle about with sixteenths .
9 It makes it sound really challenging and adventurous before you 've even bought the package , the mere fact that you have to go through that beforehand .
10 Well i that was to sort of try and make you focus on the gifts of the Holy Spirit that we 're going to receive , that we receive through or that you have strengthened through Confirmation , rather than receiving because they 're already there .
11 Some people think that if you lead a good life then you can get to Jesus and get to heaven but Jesus said that you have to come through him .
12 How can we think about something colouring our that does n't have anything to do with our bodies , nothing to do with our history , nothing to do with a particular that we 've gone through , nothing to do with our soul faculties .
13 erm do you think that the erm planning your future that we 've gone through this evening was er was of value to you ?
14 do you think the er the planning your future that we 've gone through this evening was of er particular value to you ?
15 On that evening , the day before the wedding , we went to visit our friend Clare Shenstone and her brother , friends of ours that we had met through Calvin Mark Lee .
16 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 — ‘ ‘ .
17 ‘ Now I want to share with him from the earliest moments the joy , the vindication , the victory after all that we have gone through together . ’
18 But one might hope that we could employ both the intelligence and the powers of logical thought that we have developed through natural selection .
19 You might be surprised , therefore , and certainly more than a little proud , that we have come through 1992 in remarkably good shape , and are well placed for the New Year .
20 I think that the intrusive system of inspection that we have introduced through recent Security Council resolutions is probably adequate , provided that it is vigorously enforced , to prevent the Iraqis from developing a weapon .
21 Once again each man visited with his own buddies that they 'd gone through training with here in the States , so we feel very much attached to the Hundredth Bomb Group and .
22 We recognized that they had gone through troublous times before .
23 This caused some confusion in the grandstands as most spectators did not realise that they had gone through Kyle and O'Grady .
24 What our friends did not realise was that they had to travel through Blea Moor Tunnel .
25 Girls may be there simply because they are young and things are not working out at home or with their boyfriends , or they may be designated as " ESN " ( educationally sub-normal ) , or have had previous children that they have lost through negligence or ignorance .
26 It seems likely , in short , that they have erred through applying principles which are valid for a later period but were not yet operative in the time of Molla Husrev .
27 And it was n't Iris who told us , though she had known for some time that it had come through the Strait shortly after the Belgrano had been sunk .
28 The government could claim with some truth that it had forced through changes in managerial behaviour so that concepts like efficiency , cost-effectiveness and productivity were accorded more weight in the organisational culture .
29 Lord Macaulay said : ‘ I 'm very pleased that it has gone through so readily .
30 Adrian says they 've spent a lot of time in the water … tweaking this and tweaking that and making sure that it has come through production with flying colours …
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