Example sentences of "we [modal v] have [art] [noun sg] [adv] " in BNC.
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1 | It never seems right to have players who want to leave — we should have a team where people are excited to be a part of the setup . |
2 | Well , we should have the guarantee still , there in the box there . |
3 | We should have the result soon . ’ |
4 | We should have the right not to join when the timetable date is reached in respect of the present European monetary union treaty . |
5 | It is on behalf of the latter that we should have had an opportunity of voting in Committee , which we were denied , and that we should have an opportunity tonight to vote in the House . |
6 | Oh well we 'll have a go today on there . |
7 | I said , Well we 'll have a go anyway . |
8 | We 'll have a look round in here . ’ |
9 | ‘ We 'll dump our things at the hotel , ’ Ward said , ‘ and if there 's time we 'll have a look round . ’ |
10 | All right we 'll have a look later come lets get dressed now . |
11 | I mean we 'll , we 'll have a look later |
12 | ‘ Now please let us in and we 'll have a look around . ’ |
13 | We 'll have a look around |
14 | No , we 'll have a look around , and see what they 've got . |
15 | We 'll have a look perhaps , would er I mean . |
16 | Well we 'll have a look back in , I 'll have a look back in the file and see what we did last time . |
17 | oh we 'll have a look then sometime |
18 | But when this wretched business is over , we sha n't have to be enemies any more and we 'll have a drink together . ’ |
19 | But one day we 'll have a king again . |
20 | I think we 'll have a celebration tonight , now |
21 | we 'll have a take away in the car park |
22 | we 'll have a walk up tonight . |
23 | Alright , well I tell you what , we 'll have a break then for five minutes because er I forgot I need to phone the office |
24 | I du n no , I 'll tell you in a minute , we 'll have a count nearly dinner time |
25 | ‘ Yes , ’ he said , shaking himself ; , ‘ we 'll have the vigil here the night before and put up a permanent display inside the church . ’ |
26 | I tell you what , why do n't you throw them all out and we 'll have the day off ? ’ |
27 | Or we 'll have the roof off . ’ |
28 | That brings us to quarter past ten , I suspect that there 's , tea and coffee 's out there then , and if it is , I think we 'll have the break just a bit earlier , and then we can get into it when . |
29 | All I could do was to mumble that I regretted not taking my degree , and , though I could see it was irritating of me to whine , to feel stale and bored was not such a trivial thing ; that though we might have the vote now , meals still had to be prepared and children looked after and since this kind of drudgery was despised by society as not being ‘ real work ’ , we were in the hideous position of being both exhausted and imprisoned by it and also looked down on for doing it ; that I had honestly tried to be the sort of wife Richard wanted — and the sort of wife I felt I ought to be — but it was like being in a kind of airless cell and I could only see Richard as a jailer ; that I saw myself becoming progressively more and more incapable of doing anything , not just mentally , but from some kind of paralysis of will . |
30 | ‘ Leeds City could not be suspended as a club — we had no power to do that ; but so long as they refused to give up those vital papers , we could have no way out save by expelling them . |