Example sentences of "[pron] have not made [adv] " in BNC.

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1 I have n't made up my mind just yet , indeed , I do n't quite know what to do .
2 ‘ Mebbe , I have n't made up my mind .
3 I have not made up my mind yet .
4 Space has allowed me to use only a fraction of the wealth of material provided ; I only hope I have not made too many mistakes or significant omissions and have done at least some justice to all .
5 His wife 's hair was straggling over her eyes , and she had not made up to hide the ravages of the night 's events .
6 It also shows those who have not made up their minds why Russia 's reformers are doing what they are trying to do .
7 You have n't made up your mind yet , see how you feel you might decide to just , you 've got to hump through it all
8 And despite the Ramblers ' Association suggestion of management etc , we have not made too good a job of protecting other wilderness areas open to the public .
9 People unhappy with the Major government may have told interviewers they intended to vote for one of the opposition parties even though they had not made up their minds or were even leaning towards the Tories .
10 In spite of most people perceiving themselves as planners , the survey reveals that in some of the most important and fundamental areas of life they have not made even the most minimal plans .
11 Does the accused have the intention permanently to deprive when he has not made up his mind to keep the thing permanently ?
12 Even if the buyer says he has not made up his mind yet , the salesperson can continue with his presentation or ask the customer a question , depending on which is most appropriate to the given situation .
13 At that time it had n't made up its mind whether it was going to deliver an immediate response to Sun Microsystems Inc 's Sparcstation 10 announcement — and ship systems later on in the year — or make a big splash in the Autumn with deliveries pretty much straight after .
14 He had not made up his mind what to say to him , so spent time establishing a position in the Reading Room , under the high dome , which , however high , held , he felt , insufficient oxygen for all the diligent readers , so that they lay somnolent like flames dying in Humphry Davy 's bell-jar as their sustenance was consumed .
15 And the only reason that they were undamaged was because he had n't made up his mind whether simply to destroy them , his original intention , or whether to try to sell the designs to someone else .
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