Example sentences of "have [verb] [prep] the days [prep] " in BNC.

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1 The fundamental novelty about social anthropology , as it has developed since the days of Malinowski , is that the fieldworking anthropologist tries to understand alien societies from the inside rather than from the outside .
2 How far he has come since the days in Harry Fischer 's office above the tobacconist 's , with the cosy office jokes and the lunch time beers in the pub !
3 This roar and power reverberates to the core of the being to bring one of the ancient atmosphere and into an instant consciousness of how man has progressed since the days of Robert de Tattershall 's banded-mail .
4 Society has changed since the days of the cart and horse , or since men with red flags walked in front of cars at the same speed as the Orange Walk .
5 Little has changed since the days of the Egyptians .
6 Vitruvius gives us a clear account of four of the Roman orders but , having lived in the days of Augustus , he was unable to describe the Composite Order .
7 An outstanding example of this sort of pattern in our own field is the synthetic fibre business which , historically , could be considered to have started in the days of rayon at the turn of the century .
8 But School life was not narrowly academic : excursions had featured since the days of Gilkes and the 1929 visit to Port Sunlight .
9 Tournaments were a regular feature of noble life in these years , and in 1344 at an especially magnificent tournament held at Windsor the king took an oath to establish an Order of Knights of the Round Table as it had existed in the days of Ring Arthur .
10 The well is believed to date from the sixteenth century and still produces the pure water which the inhabitants had drunk in the days of the plague .
11 Many of the villages which had been on the line of march were still depressed ; Hurstpierpoint was worth a third of what it had paid in the days of the Confessor .
12 ‘ All things I have seen in the days of my vanity : there is a just man that perisheth in his righteousness , and there is a wicked man that prolongeth his life in his wickedness . ’
13 The foundations and frame of this gracious building have existed since the days of the Domesday Book but the interior was redesigned by Sir Christopher Wren 's great grandson in 1812 .
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