Example sentences of "have [verb] [art] bad " in BNC.

  Next page
No Sentence
1 This , after all , was no ordinary case of murder and they could scarcely have picked a worse example to further their cause .
2 They would have endured the worst torment he could have devised rather than betray Resenence Jeopardy .
3 Darlington could hardly have made a worse start , goalkeeper Mark Prudhoe and his fellow defenders standing frozen to the spot as Preece smartly turned and shot into the top left corner in the ninth minute .
4 I think you 'll have to expect the worst . ’
5 Dr Julius Grayling , the man in charge , says that he would have had a worse chance of getting a grant from the Mandan Foundation if he had applied with a literal description of the work he wanted to carry out .
6 If it had n't been for him , I would have had a bad time because I hated school . ’
7 ‘ If 'e 'd been any bigger , she 'd have had a bad time . ’
8 ‘ I 'm sorry , I must have had a bad dream and screamed in my sleep . ’
9 If they had all gone for a midnight swim , we would have had the worst slick since the Torrey Canyon .
10 One of Stirling 's problems was that he was not content to let others do the raiding from time to time , though he had proved his own courage and nobody would have thought the worse of him had he decided to concentrate on sorting out the many administrative problems that beset L Detachment .
11 He could have kept Maggie to warm his bed and no one would have thought the worse of him for it .
12 ‘ If Charles had hung around long enough to notice the state I saw you in , he 'd have thought the worst had happened , Virginia .
13 Well I think they 're helping us erm possibly if this system had been started a few years ago , then possibly flats complex , would n't have got the bad reputation it has today .
14 Martinho and I must have seemed a bad pair to him .
15 Sheila could not have desired a worse profession .
16 ‘ We 've got this Unesco thing coming on — oh , here are the Fairfaxes , ’ he declared , as the door opened to admit a tall middle-aged man and an even taller woman , obviously husband and wife , who had grown to look like each other in a rather unfortunate way , their small heads and long stringy bodies seeming as if they must have combined the worst features of each .
17 Regretfully , he had to let it all pass ; he knew such behaviour would have created a bad impression with editors and got him laughed at — the thing he most feared .
18 Mr MacGregor will then have created the worst of all worlds .
19 He had made a few calls , but could n't have chosen a worse time to be setting up a casual liaison .
  Next page