Example sentences of "have [adv] to go " in BNC.
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1 | As pointed out by the collector and historian van Mander writing in 1604 , ‘ Whoever so desires nowadays has only to go to Prague to the greatest art patron in the world at the present time ; there he may see at the Imperial residence a remarkable number of outstanding and precious , curious , unusual , and priceless works . ’ |
2 | Five hundred quick miles over the Alps in tandem with a thoroughbred rival proved just how far Chrysler has still to go to building an effective contender . |
3 | As we shall see , to understand British politics fully one has also to go beyond that framework . |
4 | With only 26 analysts , mostly banking specialists , it still has far to go . |
5 | If she has far to go , the evening will soon be setting in . ’ |
6 | But recycling still has far to go : Japan , with little land to spare , recycles 40% of its solid waste . |
7 | It was the in-between of that sludge-grey spring that stopped and started , flowers bursting out then drenched with sleet , blighted by snow ; skies grey and thundery , rain mean and seeping , wind a slinking greasy cur that has paddled through filthy city ponds and has nowhere to go . |
8 | The one point on which Mr Golyadkin and Double were agreed was that there is nobody like God , but it follows pat and false that if a man has nowhere to go God will look after him . |
9 | Whereas Mr Golyadkin , incidentally mad , swaddled in a dream of silk ladders and Spanish serenades , aims for Schiller 's happy-everafter hut on the shore , Stepan understands he has nowhere to go : ‘ to order post-horses one must at least know where one is going . |
10 | ‘ That poor man has nowhere to go , ’ she said . |
11 | from light which has nowhere to go , |
12 | White water canoeing is a new sport compared to fishing and ‘ landowning ’ and is trying to expand but has nowhere to go . |
13 | Here the value of privacy may act against the interests of family members ; neighbours may consider that it is not their business to interfere and the beaten wife-at least before the growth of women 's self-help centres — may find that she has nowhere to go ( Pizzey , 1974 ) . |
14 | GUIL gets up but has nowhere to go . |
15 | Yes , she has nowhere to go , she was like a damp sponge . |
16 | The rumple-headed lion has nowhere to go |
17 | The device is called the Microdrive , but it has yet to go on sale , and in any case will be based on a tape rather than a disc . |
18 | What kind of slump is it when England 's most expensive striker has yet to go more than two games without a goal ? |
19 | But and you know , like , for mothers er trying to get buggies and shopping and everything up , they 'd either to go up stairs or down stairs . |
20 | erm because , to get in to the flat they 'd either to go up stairs from the deck , or downstairs from the deck , and to try and manage that with small children , probably a buggy and shopping as well . |
21 | and er when I was going through the change and I 'm post menopause er and having terrible feelings , I 'd nowhere to go ! |
22 | He 'd nowhere to go . |
23 | ‘ Every man must have somewhere to go , ’ Marmeladov tells Raskolnikov who has dropped into the pub after his ‘ rehearsal ’ of the murder . |
24 | He frequents a seedy restaurant — ‘ You see this wretched tavern I spend all my time in , and I enjoy it , or rather it 's not that I really enjoy it , but one must have somewhere to perch ’ : this is the form which the Dostoevsky no-home takes with him , likewise the transpersonal motif first voiced by Marmeladov in this novel , that a man must have somewhere to go . |
25 | A man must have somewhere to go . |
26 | Aye , the lepers and beggars must have somewhere to go , but why does it have to be on my front doorstep ? |
27 | Without them some data gathered in orbit will have nowhere to go . |
28 | It had suddenly struck her that he was a stranger in the town , and might have nowhere to go . |
29 | However , because of the low levels of provision of rural council houses and small owner-occupied bungalows , especially purpose-built accommodation for the elderly , people who want to move out of accommodation that is too large may have nowhere to go locally . |
30 | He said the terrorists were intent on ensuring that ordinary people would have nowhere to go to enjoy themselves . |