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Example sentences for "has gone"

  • He saw her home; he has gone in for a moment, he is not staying, because you are waiting here.

  • At last," cried Marguerite, coming back, "he has gone!

  • He has gone to get her authority to have the corpse dug up again and put somewhere else.

  • He has gone to his own people to tell them so.

  • Dick Heldar is my best friend, and--and--the fact is that he has gone blind.

  • I know it has gone out to the Marazion Bell-buoy," said Dick, with a chuckle.

  • You've shot your bolt here and it has gone home.

  • Days elapse and still he comes not; even Poole does not know where he has gone; even Poole has not seen him!

  • A deluge, at least, has gone over me and my world since I looked on the face of his widow.

  • He has gone on an errand to the post-office; he will soon return.

  • I employed in this work one of the best artisans in Paris; unfortunately, he has gone mad, and I shall never find his equal.

  • It is especially since his Louve was Saint-Lazared that he has gone on like a madman.

  • Well, I confess to your majesty, I wanted to see if it was really true that Councillor Bugeaud has gone over to the enemy.

  • He has gone to God, and you are now Dauphin of France!

  • He has gone over to the camp of her enemies, and rages against the queen, because she is inclined to favor the wishes of the people.

  • I demand of you, therefore, that if any one asks where the count has gone, you answer that you do not know.

  • He is so anxious to keep out of the mud that he has gone to the other extreme.

  • But thou hast said that Linus has gone to Ostrianum," cried Vinicius impatiently.

  • Till this lost one is found I should seek in another that which for the moment has gone from me with her.

  • He had to go to-day to Beneventum, whither he was summoned by Vatinius, therefore all will think that he has gone there.

  • He may build a monument to himself in some institution, but we do not know enough of the world to which he has gone to know whether a tiny monument on this earth is any satisfaction to a person who is free of the universe.

  • I did not know whence he came; I do not know whither he has gone.

  • There is a notion that the art of conversation, the ability to talk well, has gone out.

  • And that's why he has gone over to the Jesuits again, utilising their hatred of his rival, and anticipating that they will be forced to support him in order to defeat the other.

  • Nothing has been changed, with the exception that the furniture has gone.

  • The fact is, he has gone to see my friend Lisbeth to her carriage.

  • And how bitterly one regrets not having seized hold of happiness when the time for it has gone!

  • So tell the others to fry several quails, and get anything nice, that goes well with them, and prepare it for our repast, while you can go and stroll about in some other spot, and return when you fancy she has gone.

  • It's really true," she explained, "that he has gone out of doors.

  • I know it has gone out to the Marazion Bell-buoy,' said Dick, with a chuckle.

  • He has gone out of doors in a holiday spirit, has had a good time, has never lost the boy's relish for his outings, and has been so blessed with the gift of expression that his own delight is communicated to his reader.

  • He has gone for a trip to the Isles of Greece in a currant ship.

  • Oh, no," I answered; "he has gone for a trip down the Mediterranean on a currant ship.

  • Perhaps he has gone to wait in the drawing-room,' he said.

  • In view of the fact that the outside can now be reached through the new tunnel, and that Thomas Roch has everything he requires, I can only conclude that the tug has gone off on another marauding expedition.

  • I conclude that it has gone to tow the schooner, and perhaps to destroy any merchant vessels that may come in their way.

  • On the other hand, although the tug has nothing to fear from the heavy seas, as it would be in calm water a few yards below the surface, it is hardly likely that it has gone on a trip unless to accompany the schooner.

  • Perhaps he has gone on to the inn," suggested some one.

  • Let none of you allow it to be known that he has gone.

  • Plougastel exclaim in agitation: "He has gone already!

  • And I know where he has gone--or at least whom he has gone with.


  • The above list will hopefully provide you with a few useful examples demonstrating the appropriate usage of "has gone" in a variety of sentences. We hope that you will now be able to make sentences using this group of words.


    Some common collocations, pairs and triplets of words:
    fifteen inches; fifty guineas; has already been pointed; has already been said; has also; has become; has been; has been already mentioned; has been already remarked; has been already stated; has been said before; has come; has its; has nothing; has said; haste away; hasty movement; highly developed; life goes; made either; marine engine; more satisfactory; often applied; quite different; sat down beside her; speak with