Example sentences of "have go [prep] [noun] [adv] [prep] " in BNC.
Next pageNo | Sentence |
---|---|
1 | The present writer has gone on record elsewhere with the view that most of the ‘ new ’ powers in the Single European Act represented treaty recognition of developments which had already taken place under general treaty powers , in particular Articles 100 and 235 , in areas such as environmental law . |
2 | I thought we got him and Forrester at the same time — they 'd gone to Auxerre straight from the FA School of Excellence or something . |
3 | So erm I might have to go to Peterborough yet on that day and get myself kitted out . |
4 | On a dry pitch Kieft might have gone for goal instead of squaring the ball to Berghuis , one of four new Dutch caps to appear during the game , whose shot sailed high over the bar . |
5 | And Dalglish must have gone into shock again as the side who have so far swept all before them suddenly surrendered their 100 per cent home record . |
6 | Matron said I had to go to bed early for a fortnight . |
7 | Fisher , who had gone to Melbourne briefly in 1897 with high hopes of being selected for Australia , was determined to see Otago cricket prosper , and convinced the local authorities that Crawford would be the type of coach who could bring on the young Otago players . |
8 | When they had gone to bed together on New Year 's Eve it had been like a revelation to him . |
9 | The move is bad news for IBM Personal Software Products in its efforts to get OS/2 2.0 established , because many corporate users have gone for OS/2 specifically for its relatively easy integration with mainframe DB2 . |
10 | The move is bad news for IBM Personal Software Products in its efforts to get OS/2 2.0 established , because many corporate users have gone for OS/2 specifically for its relatively easy integration with mainframe DB2 . |
11 | However the Tories , who have gone into coalition only in times of great national danger , can take heart from history . |