Example sentences of "not have go [adv] " in BNC.

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1 He can not quite detach himself or even avoid nerves ; he has to be eternally in readiness ; only when the final curtain has fallen can he be sure he will not have to go on .
2 What concerns me is the project engineers are in close liaison with the client , and have a lot of procedures to go through that er S T Os and M S ones at design engineering level do not have to go through .
3 But shortly before the general election , local authorities throughout Britain were told they did not have to go ahead and that a second period of consultation was to be held .
4 There was no raid so we did not have to go up .
5 We do not have to go quite so far afield to find another language which still plays a considerable part in our daily conversation .
6 The Danes will not have to go along with plans for a single currency , or with plans for a common Euro-defence policy .
7 Unlike Daniel Miller I do not have to go there in person .
8 In that way , we would increase national expenditure on training and the Secretary of State would not have to go in for these dictatorial measures .
9 Cash 's workers did not have to go out to the sound of the factory bell or whistle , but simply went upstairs from home to workshop , and thus kept a little of the independence they prized .
10 I do not have to go that far and I do not go that far . ’
11 I do not have to go that far and I do not go that far …
12 But we do not have to go back to prehistoric times to witness the change in our diet .
13 But one does not have to go so far as to support child benefit for the qualitative demographic effect it may or may not have .
14 It is possible that due to replacement of ageing springs and ropes the organs originally went somewhat slower , but they could not have gone slower by much because the bellows are linked with the barrels ' rotation too slow a pace means that insufficient air circulates for the pipes to speak .
15 But there is a solution — otherwise Helen would not have gone on to experience a triumphant life .
16 Had B lost on the question of law in the Court of Appeal , it is practically inconceivable that the court would not have gone on to deal with the remaining points of appeal .
17 For they could not have gone on haunting her .
18 According to Mrs Baldwin , whose account was more immediate , the words were : ‘ Sir , this is a very grave decision and I am deeply grieved ’ ; but the significant difference is that she adds : ‘ and he went on to tell him that according to some legal opinion the divorce ought not to have been granted , that there were certain aspects of it that in any ordinary case would not have gone through . ’
19 Could I have honestly earned enough to have subsisted upon , to find me in proper food and clothing , such as is necessary , I should not have gone astray
20 Emancipated as she considered herself , Zeinab would not have gone up to them alone .
21 But all might not have gone well .
22 More sprightliness in the name-tag might not have gone amiss .
23 Yeah but the advice might not have gone amiss and
24 While such behaviour can not be condoned , an occasional show of controlled passion from England 's bowlers would not have gone amiss on the same ground when Australia were winning the first Test .
25 He was shown the puppets too , and the performance can not have gone entirely without excitement , because he mentioned to me explosions backstage and things falling down .
26 Presumably the passing of over three thousand horsemen could not have gone entirely unnoticed , even of a winter 's night , but discretion in such situations was another and necessary Border virtue , and no alarm was raised in the hamlets and farm-touns which they could not avoid , however many dogs barked .
27 ‘ I would not have gone in on my own , ’ he admitted , ‘ but I think that we might go again .
28 I may not have gone back to sleep but I lay awake grinning .
29 He can not have gone far .
30 Some men may not have gone far from their original homes , but others were willing to seek their fortune at a distance : the London merchant class was recruited from every part of the country , including the far North ( 104 , pp.210–12 , 389–92 ) .
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