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

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1 Kind of but a cross between the ringlets you do and the ringlets that I had and the type of hair I 've got .
2 how many clients we 've got , you know for updating , what the capacities are and plus er we do n't know erm what sort of cable we 've got in so they might have only a ten P a cable when they already have nine pairs in use
3 but , but the thing is if , if the traffic 's gon na be heavy , if it thinks we 're gon na get stuck in traffic , if you 've got a G T I you 're that type of driver you 've got that type of power , you can sort of pass and save a bit of time
4 So you 're interested in what sort of function you 've got .
5 It might cost you a thousand pounds if you live in a a huge detached house and in the back of building you 've got lots of rooms .
6 If you want a highly paid industrial job with a lot of responsibility you 've got to do a science degree .
7 And oh we 'll ask your dad what sort of computer he 's got .
8 But it is very unfriendly in a way which erm has to do with the type of interaction you 've got to have .
9 to get in , three fifty each and then we paid another six pound , ten P and for that we had popcorn , Minstrels , one large Coke , a lot bigger than that and two small ones , and of course everything 's got like all this on
10 They have many more management techniques , which we did n't have — which we 've given them — and of course they 've got new ideas coming along as well. , Pearce 's own progression within Esso was a series of the grasped opportunities he talks about enthusiastically .
11 And then of course they 've got this soldering iron type thing called the diathermy cautery device that seals up the blood vessels and this is being stabbed into her .
12 Of course they 've got the
13 And she said erm where they have their big discos in the universities er you know , about two thousand five hundred of them come round of course they 've got fire alarm systems there , then she said you get the underground so called Mafia , whatever you like to call them she said , they are chaps she said in their thirties , and forties , arrive in shiny big white and red Porsches this that and the other and deliberately , cos they 're club owners
14 and of course they 've got to be careful in case they kill the grass and around the outside is what
15 There 's also some murals on the walls , various artists did murals and of course they 've got this grant from for six thousand pound for a exhibition .
16 Later on , in a pub , Mr Smith chats to a friend : ‘ Of course we 've got to get stuck in , at least to some extent , because the alternatives make the mind boggle . ’
17 We 've actually got a situation outside where I live where a thirty mile an hour speed limit is erm finishes just in front of some of the houses and of course we 've got no access to their the gardens so we just park on the road .
18 And of course we 've got this I have a little dog and she loves to roll in this .
19 Now of course we 've got some experience in these things and we can put together some sort of picture of what that trade unionism for a new world might look like .
20 Yes but of of course we 've got a number of estates er around the Mansfield er but we have made inquiries we 've er er we 've made appeals through the press and the radio as you well know .
21 But of course we 've got to be a bit careful , because the Americans are going , sort of the other way now , that people ca n't wear perfume and deodorant , that , that smell and things like that , can they , because it 's now seen as being equally as difficult as people who smoke .
22 Of course we 've got the training and testing the same as in normal networks .
23 So clearly that is something that er er e i i is a matter for the accountancy profession in some way er but of course we 've got the problem as well then that er er Price Waterhouse operating in the United States presumably er comes within the jurisdiction of Price Wate the accountancy profession in the United States and it is something that the government is going to have address itself to .
24 because of course we 've got older children than Edmund .
25 Oh yours is a , I , but , how 's the , of course we 've got skirting board in ours
26 Well I reckon it 's gon na take us three and a half hours to get to the other end , so two and a half hours to it and an hour on it if it 's not too bad and then of course we 've got to go up from there to Ipswich , Woodbridge but it 's dual carriageway all the way now you see .
27 And we went up there and we had just we 'd , we took the labour rooms and er of course we had got a cup of tea with them you know ?
28 Of course we 'd got good excuse .
29 Well that 's one the other reason , of course we have got a large number of chur , very small churches in fact , looking at our mai , ministry figures nineteen ninety there were thirty churches that did n't pay anything to the maintenance and a lot of these , I think , maybe
30 Noble Lord , Lord Callaghan says and I might say so , slightly mischievously , well after all he 's going to appoint the appointers and going to make the short list , short list for the Right My Right Honourable Friend to appoint , but of course somebody 's got to appoint the appointers and er that would be done by the by my Right Honourable Friend , but that does n't mean to say for goodness sake that they 're in his pocket .
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