Example sentences of "[pron] have [noun sg] [prep] " in BNC.

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1 without abstractions , without combs — everyone has hair like bark …
2 But everyone has breakfast in bars .
3 Now Everyone Has Access to the Printer
4 She lowered her voice to a whisper , ‘ … you should know that everyone has access to every typewriter in the newsroom .
5 The control and communication functions of middle management become redundant when everyone has access to their own computer terminal .
6 Everyone has access to the whole system , both to see what 's going on and to contribute to change through Corrective Action and writing new procedures and instructions .
7 What will happen to all those projects if none of them has access to the channel tunnel and to the rapid movement of freight and passengers around the London area ?
8 No-one has access to your thoughts , feelings and motives , only to your actions ( ie behaviour ) , and so unless you are open in revealing them , people are obliged to indulge in speculation .
9 If someone has difficulty in dressing , make it easier with one or more aids for dressing — do n't just do everything for them .
10 If entry into a market is barred then the market is not contestable — someone has control over it .
11 They need to know someone has charge of their lives , then they can build from a base of safety and security .
12 The subjects accept that someone has authority over them only if their willingness to do his bidding is not conditional on their agreement on the merits of performing the actions required by the authority .
13 What is it to claim authority or to accept that someone has authority over one ?
14 resorting to the things I 'm sure I 'd resort to , like shoplifting or the methods of gaining money .
15 I 'd kind of been hoping they 'd take the cuffs off me altogether by now but I suppose they 're thinking that the body in the shaft does n't prove anything by itself , and that Andy could still be dead , or he could be alive and he — or somebody else — could have kidnapped Halziel and Lingary to provide cover for me .
16 ‘ When she left me for one of the other guys in the team , somebody I 'd kind of thought of as a friend … well , ’ he went on hurriedly , ‘ I was n't surprised she 'd gone .
17 I 'd said to Mr Palmer in 1960 after St Andrews that I 'd caddie for him anywhere .
18 But to my dismay he said he 'd got a local caddie for Birkdale , and that he 'd misunderstood me when I said I 'd caddie for him anywhere .
19 I 'd bum round the world looking for a lost cause and then if I found one I 'd settle down and try to save it .
20 ‘ Every day , I 'd cycle from Clapton to King 's Cross , take the train to Pinewood , then the bus to the studio to be directed by David Lean in scenes with Alec Guinness .
21 I 'd sort of missed the music of the band I once knew , so maybe there had been one hippy in attendance , after all …
22 Because I 'd sort of said that
23 He was very very tolerant with me and he brought me back into it without a lot of undue pressure and erm because transport was n't my life but I 'd sort of dedicated myself to it .
24 Well I think you see on that , as I 'd sort of said to you before
25 Well she said I 'd sort of thought of going , are you going , I says yeah okay I said , if you wo n't go I 'll , we 'll go together , I said but I do n't particularly want to get , you know , roped into it at the moment .
26 but she was getting there , her and Bren were er conferring you see I 'd sort of gone through what I 'd done and every now and again she 'd say well I 've done this and I 'd say well it 's right .
27 The first thing to do is to rephrase the question that everyone asks themselves , not ‘ what would I like to grow , what do I want to grow ? ’ but ‘ what do I have space for , and how much time am I prepared to devote to looking after what I plant ? ’
28 What was more , not only did I have breakfast with I the family ( I live in the Smiths ' Quarter in Chelsea Barracks ) — toast , bacon and sausages , washed down with milk — but we had no muster parade that morning , and no Adjutant 's Orders to attend .
29 In response to some implied criticism I made of his treatment of the sub-editor , Porua regarded me in a sneering silence and then said , ‘ Why should I have regard for my fellows ?
30 Well , do I have news for you and them .
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