Example sentences of "[pron] have [verb] it to " in BNC.

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1 I had never used the word malai in her hearing ; now I 'd applied it to her .
2 ‘ I 'd have been all right if I 'd made it to the main road . ’
3 ‘ I thought I 'd given it to you , ’ John says .
4 ‘ I thought I 'd given it to you , ’ Paul says .
5 I 'd left it to the end of the meal before I said anything about being arrested .
6 I 'd described it to her myself .
7 " Sooner than I 'd meant it to , " Sara said a little ruefully .
8 So , I said no , I 'd mentioned it to you and talked about it .
9 Do I have to do it to the end ?
10 If I am to change it I feel that I might as well put a larger engine in it , could you please advise me what would be the best petrol engine and would I have to convert it to 12 volt ; which I do n't really want to do .
11 I had made it to the door of my flat .
12 In fact , the next paper I sent him was called , if I remember rightly , ‘ The Poet — the Public — the Faith ’ , and I had dispatched it to a review called The Green Quarterly , the only recollection of which I have is that it was quarterly and that it was green .
13 ‘ But I already have an assault charge hanging over me , so in the end I had to leave it to the stewards .
14 I felt I had to mention it to you , but let this be the end of it .
15 We have no choice ; when my father died in nineteen seventy-nine I had to come to an arrangement with the Capital Taxes Office , that , er for not paying the full value of the er death duties on the value of the contents of the house , I had to open it to the public , quite frankly , if then and even more now , if I had to pay the full amount , I 'd have had to sell everything which my family have collected over the last seven hundred years .
16 ‘ I was under the impression that I had explained it to you .
17 In the end I had to take it to a skid pan to see how far it would go before it eventually lost its cool The answer was as far as its steering lock would allow .
18 I had expected it to be best for trenching and shaping in the vertical position , but on all but the softest of timbers it failed to supply a substantial cut .
19 I had expected it to be cold but it surprised me with a suddenness that wrenched my breath away .
20 I knew I had to bring it to some kind of confession , but saying , ‘ I love you , ’ to a woman who loved another man ?
21 This steered them away , as I had meant it to , and they talked for a while longer , then fell silent , enjoying the warmth and the view .
22 Now that I had to get it to the by taxi and she had seven stitches put in the leg and , I had to leave her there for six hours , well then it was a taxi back home , I could n't now I am on income support , but that cost me fifty four pound , ninety five and I am paying that .
23 On the other hand , I had to prove it to my own satisfaction and I hailed a cab to the next corner .
24 I suppose that Kenneth Ingram , the editor , had not quite made up his mind about what I had written , which is the reason why I had forwarded it to Eliot .
25 A fire was lit in the ‘ Front Room ’ ( the only time I had known it to be used ) .
26 That was no jackdaw 's call — although for just a moment I had taken it to be .
27 It was only when I rang her up to chase up what had happened to the she says , oh dear I 've sent it to the wrong one .
28 I 've said it to you before , but I 'll say it again .
29 I 'm afraid I , I 've only got one spare tape recorder and I 've lent it to somebody already erm
30 I 've repeated it to myself a hundred times already .
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