Example sentences of "have [adv] [to-vb] [adv] [prep] " in BNC.
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1 | I 've kept him informed and he has just to get on with his job . |
2 | Yet somehow the message has still to get through to British Rail that the communication of travel information is no longer a luxury , to be fed in titbits to grateful passengers . |
3 | What has yet to become an accepted methodology in the study of public administration is a perception of organizations , including those in the public sector , as being themselves political systems.l Organization theory , drawing primarily as ever on evidence from private firms and corporations , offers political interpretations of the internal structures and decisionmaking of large-scale organizations which the study of public administration has yet to take up in any systematic manner ( Walsh et al. |
4 | ‘ But it has yet to filter through to the more expensive properties . ’ |
5 | The left has yet to wake up to the new politics as played by the Prime Minister . |
6 | Chairman Murray has yet to comment publicly on the situation , but the Roker staff clearly want the issue resolved quickly . |
7 | It has yet to catch on in the Third World but when it does it could prove extremely useful . |
8 | As a result he joined the Royal Manor of Portland Athletics Club and has since run in several races for the club in the Dorset Road Racing League , although he has yet to catch up with his friend Tony Coleman from B40 Workshop ! |
9 | With the experience of the Contagious Diseases Acts in mind , Ellice Hopkins tartly remarked there were ‘ one or two things which the medical profession has yet to grow out of under the influence of an enlightened public opinion ’ . |
10 | If so , the impact on the economy of the massive easing of policy since September ( slashing interest rates from 10% to 6% ) , has yet to show up in the figures . |
11 | For anyone who has yet to come up with an idea , BVP will provide access into the venture portfolio of 140 successful US products , established by companies which have already developed their product and secured a significant market share . |
12 | But Mr Kohl 's lack of forthrightness in acting against racist attacks and his reluctance to take up the cause of their victims suggests a chancellor , if not a country , who has yet to come fully to terms with the past . |
13 | I feel as if I 'll always have somewhere to come home to . |
14 | We know that 's largely what they want , but we 're having possibly to move away from that . |
15 | ‘ When Masklin comes back , he 's going to have somewhere to come back to . ’ |
16 | She had only to sit back with perfect composure — something at which she was adept — and wait for him to find his way through the necessary preliminaries to the real business of this meeting . |
17 | Clarac had only to step out of line once and he would be out , family connections or no . |
18 | Maurice had only to look around at Casterton to see the ideal place for his school . |
19 | This time he had less to shout about on his Aston Martin stand — just the new two-plus-two Volante with the lower hood line . |
20 | They spent the rest of the afternoon in animated discussion — so animated that Folly had gently to point out to her employee that it was time to lock up . |
21 | He knew that he had somehow to stay here on the headland , to keep always in view that monstrous building which dominated his imagination as it did his view . |
22 | ‘ Agreed , ’ he answered reluctantly , wishing he had more to go on before meeting Leitzig . |
23 | Whereas the user of surface water had once to cope only with changes due to weather ( i.e. , silt in storm water ) , of which some warning was obtained , in future the change may occur without warning in mains water . |
24 | The tape measure had now to go down into the hollow as well as across the circle , and it was not long enough to do this . |
25 | From either of these points there were several paths to be taken : a few orders could go directly to the Great Seal , but most had initially to go either to the Signet or to the Privy Seal , sometimes to both . |
26 | In forty-four years the British had yet to recover fully from victory in the Second World War , even though the Germans and Japanese had so manifestly recovered from defeat . |
27 | They were the original fittings left over from the beginning of the century which the Diocesan Parsonage Committee had yet to get around to modernising . |
28 | Some had nowhere to live apart from crowded dormitory rooms , even after getting married . |
29 | to Coronation Street do not know all the facts of course , we are ignorant of the finer points of the time gone by , but why is Deirdre so lasted to Ken I 've yet to catch up with Wednesday night 's proceedings on my video contraption , but the last thing that I heard Deirdre say to Ken as he was recovering on a put-u-up in her front room was , I 'm stuck with you till you back on your feet and as far as I 'm concerned it ca n't come soon enough for me , Ken lay there immobile , stunned , a cruel carry on , what 's the poor chap done , but then I 've missed too much |
30 | ‘ We have only to put together in the right way what we know without adding anything , and the satisfaction we are trying to get from the explanation comes of itself . ’ |