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have a go

VERB
  1. make an attempt at something
    I never sat on a horse before but I'll give it a go

How To Use have a go In A Sentence

  • We have a good deal of information about the polemical and often bitter arguments Christians, Jews, and pagans had with one another in the early centuries.
  • I also have a goldenrod-colored scarf (you know, one of those pashmina-y things) that goes nicely with this, and about two weeks ago I was in "the city" (which seems to be what you call San Francisco, if you live near it) wearing this dress, that scarf, and an old denim Levi's jacket I swiped from my Dad in roughly 1987 (with bright pink leather gloves sticking out of the breast pocket) and a tourist actually STOPPED ME ON THE STREET and asked to take my picture. The Return (With Butterflies) - A Dress A Day
  • A doctor with whom you have a good, communicative and friendly relationship is a rare beast.
  • If you delay child-bearing until your mid-twenties or your early thirties, you are far more likely to have a good job, educational qualifications and a stable relationship.
  • Bands, dancing and Gurkha storytelling will also feature, while the more energetic visitors can have a go at an Army climbing wall or aerial ropeway.
  • We have a government embarked on class war against our people. Times, Sunday Times
  • We will have a good barometer to see how far we are. Times, Sunday Times
  • The pair are now said to have a good working relationship. Times, Sunday Times
  • I've always enjoyed snorkelling and I fancied scuba diving, so I was keen to have a go.
  • The people may safely be trusted to hear everything true and false, and to form a correct judgment,Were it fall to me to decide whether we should have a government without newspapers of newspapers without a government, I should not hesitate a moment to prefer the latter. 
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