Example sentences of "have go [adv prt] [prep] a " in BNC.

  Next page
No Sentence
1 More than 100 jobs have been axed , a For Sale sign has gone up over a large slice of its assets and chief executive Andros Stakis has been ousted .
2 ‘ What has made it particularly difficult , for manufacturers of all sizes , but most of all for smaller ones , is that it has gone on for a long time .
3 The medal , presented by the Duke of Edinburgh at Buckingham Palace , is awarded each year to a holder of a City & Guilds qualification who has gone on to a senior management position in their chosen field .
4 The thing has gone on in a different way from previous years , and the outcome , as you 've observed , although the Liberal Democrats initially proposed spending at capping , they have gone down by half a million pounds .
5 As it is , he has gone down as a highly skilled bowler who , because he lacked the flamboyance of some of his colleagues , attracted less attention than many of them ; but who consistently , almost stealthily , got on with the job of collecting three or four wickets in innings after innings after innings .
6 Mark Frost has gone back as a bowler , though of course he could come again .
7 Most analysts have now cut their first quarter forecast , and the views now range from a loss of 64 cents a share to a profit of eight cents — and David Wu of S G Warburg has gone out on a limb with forecast $0.80 a share loss .
8 As I write , the invitation has gone out to a thousand mainstream church leaders to attend a London conference , ‘ to equip church leaders who desire to develop the gift and ministry of prophecy . ’
9 And so Ruth , the one who has gone out as a poor glean and walking behind the reapers , hoping they would treat her kindly .
10 ‘ Your mother has gone off on a little holiday , ’ he had announced vaguely and Katherine had returned to New York and to school .
11 As you may already realise , once again the Almeida has gone in for a lot of posh posturing got up as a drama of social consciousness .
12 She 'd gone on into a book-lined room which appeared to be in use as an office , and she was placing the shotgun along with two others in a locking steel cabinet .
13 I mean , if he 'd gone off with a humped-back , three legged dwarf I would have felt pretty unattractive .
14 I 'll never even dare to be successful , because when I 'm dead some clod with a thesis to write will put me down as a wild-eyed harridan who jumped on her lover in the street and pulled all his hair out because he 'd gone off with a person with webbed feet .
15 It would n't be so bad if he 'd gone off with a beauty , but I 'm damned if I 'll form part of a collection which includes someone bandy . ’
16 Then they 'd gone in for a look .
17 She wondered if the others were playing a joke on her : perhaps they 'd gone out for a walk ; perhaps , at this very moment , they were laughing at the thought of her waiting for a killer who would never come .
18 I had this octopus once in Germany and it , we 'd gone out for a meal and I was gon na have steak and mushrooms and
19 Especially as apparently you 'd gone out in a hurry and not taken a handbag .
20 Why should you have to go round with a frozen face because a child has kicked the cat ?
21 I 'd say we 'll have to do more than that , I 'd say we 'll have to go down for a week .
22 Unless — do you have to go back to a hospital with it , or anything ? ’
23 Well I think that probably Neil 's clothes will have to go back in a Marks and Spencers
24 Her mum said Sergeant Joe would take care of that Flash Harry , but if he did n't she 'd have a go herself , she 'd bash Archie 's bowler so hard over his head he 'd never get it off again , he 'd have to go about like a man with no eyeballs .
25 yeah so I mean he said we 're gon na have to go out for a drink and sit down and discuss it , you know
26 it 's no good I 'm gon na have to go out for a breath of fresh air .
27 He would probably have gone on to a ripe old age . ’
28 Farrar was educated at the Rev. Thomas Arnold 's private oral school at Northampton and was a child prodigy who passed both the London University and Cambridge University examinations by the time he was 17 , and could no doubt have gone on towards a degree had he been inclined to do so .
29 Experts said that if the bombs had penetrated any part of the cigar-shaped cylinders they would have gone off like a rocket , smashing into nearby homes .
30 Something must have come up , and she must have gone off in a hurry .
  Next page