Example sentences of "[conj] [pron] have [vb pp] [pron] the " in BNC.

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1 The mere fact that I have set myself the end X , with Y as a necessary means to it , and without conflict with other prudential or moral considerations , does not guarantee me from being mistaken in doing Y ( Anyone who supposed that it did would indeed be guilty of the Naturalistic Fallacy without appeal . )
2 Rainbow admits that I have told her the tale of the Gittel affair , and why Anya called down the curse in the first place .
3 Although you have assured us the massive cut in income will not now occur , the fear among our members is any compromise will result in an inevitable fall in the standard of care we can offer to patients in the future .
4 Remember that you have denied yourself the possibility of making an income for at least three years .
5 The request that you have done me the honour to make , to receive the record of my voice , is one that I cheerfully comply with so far as lies in my power ; though I lament to say that the voice which I transmit to you is only the relic of an organ the employment of which has been overstrained .
6 Once you have decided what the extra staffing and other requirements are in respect of the two conferences , you can work out how much it is going to cost to accommodate them .
7 Until now , we have discussed financial reporting in terms of the organization , and it has been implicit that we have understood what the organization is and what its implications for accounting are .
8 He has been so accurate , some claim , that they have dubbed him the ‘ historian of the future ’ .
9 Northampton have been so suitably impressed by Ross 's abilities that they have offered him the coaching job for the next two seasons , a post that he has accepted .
10 ‘ And neither will Froebe and his men , once they have shown us the way . ’
11 On 19 December 1991 the local authority made their application for an interim care order and I have said what the order was .
12 Sixty years ago C. J. Herrick , the American comparative anatomist , dubbed it the ‘ organ of civilisation ’ , and I have set myself the task of seeing how far our scientific knowledge of nerve cells might earn the neocortex this grandiose title : Would these nerve cells , as actors , be able to perform the play , ‘ Civilisation ’ ?
13 All this is programmatic until we have shown what the crucial sceptical argument is .
14 I doubt whether they should run sandwich courses until they have learned what the words mean ’ .
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