Example sentences of "[vb base] [pers pn] [modal v] have [verb] " in BNC.

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1 Lastly , I fear I may have to disappoint you when I say that the coin is more interesting than valuable .
2 You mean I 'll have to wait a very long time .
3 You know I mean I 'll have to find something like a
4 Well erm I mean I might have said
5 Well , he need n't , I mean I would have stayed in bed .
6 I mean I would have to say that that , that turn by the Chinese Communist Party meant that it was a turn away from the idea that it was the , the ordinary people themselves who , who should shape their own destiny .
7 Now my , I mean I would have to say , I mean very clearly , that they 're inseparable .
8 So I mean I would have thought they 've got ta comply with the same
9 ‘ You mean I should have guessed he 'd come prepared to blackmail us ? ’ she enquired with mock sweetness .
10 ‘ You mean I should have offered Dunedin also to Earl Siward ?
11 I mean I could have made it up it was that easy .
12 I expect I would have gone anyway ; it was something of an event . ’
13 ‘ But suppose I 'm on it , and the driver becomes ill , then I expect I 'll have to take over .
14 Now I realise I must have looked awful .
15 She says as I say I 'll have to wait and see what she says , because she said , you know when weather gets better , oh I says you 're better off waiting while it gets better weather
16 ‘ I make it quite clear anything I say I would have said regardless of the result of this present case , ’ he told the court .
17 I say I would have found you the cheapest ones , and they were good quality ones as well , you know you go to some of these garden centres and
18 You say I 'd have to revert to the ranks .
19 Gordon Strachan OBE is simply unbelievable , and if HRH has been shown highlights of the game yet , I expect she 'll have popped the hereditary peerage in the post for him .
20 ‘ You realise you might have to give hir back , do n't you ? ’
21 ‘ They say you should have gone to the very top in the army after the war but you were stopped .
22 At another time and place she could have helped me in no uncertain manner .
23 He walked with a limp , and had you not known better you could have mistaken the sores and scabs on his face for the kind of wounds worn by down-and-outs in Cardboard City .
24 The Billeting Office found us accommodation , but no one appeared to be responsible for us otherwise , though I expect we could have gone to our administrative chief Harold Fletcher , if we had been in any serious trouble .
25 — ‘ If there is a Taig , ’ he said , ‘ you realise we 'll have to do something about it . ’
26 ‘ I still say we should have called the police . ’
27 If they had dominated I expect they would have had at least a few more ( in 20 mins ) .
28 I expect they will have to have some prayer about it all .
29 Very big and brave they must have looked in their new NATO camouflage suits , and absolutely dead they were when they were taken out of the vans .
30 ‘ Now my parents realise they may have to go to help with identification .
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