Example sentences of "they [modal v] have no [noun sg] " in BNC.

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No Sentence
1 When children are unable to find work they may have no option but to stay at home .
2 They should have no difficulty in paying for those extra officers .
3 On this occasion , though , they should have no cause to doubt the judgment of the umpire .
4 Nevertheless they should have no place in pure classical ballets because they are largely acrobatic , and as such have a place only in certain modern works which discard the old conventions in order to display the athleticism and freedom of movement that today 's choreographers use as part of their material .
5 But , as I said , some hinds will have , er some er stags will have no hinds at all , they wo n't manage any matings , and as a result they 'll have no reproduction success .
6 But if you put a poor team under pressure they 'll have no chance and Ince and Palmer are the two who must do that job .
7 When that happens then the , some of the most effective voices on behalf of the state system will be silent , they 'll have no interest in preserving the best features of the state education system .
8 and er they said well they , they 'll have no trouble with er compensation
9 ‘ Once they are beyond the reach of the Wyrmberg 's magic then they 'll have no Power .
10 They 'll have no time .
11 White men , he began , made the common mistake of assuming that , because the Aboriginals were wanderers , they could have no system of land tenure .
12 Obviously they can not be expected to vet all the publications they sell , and it would be grossly unfair to hold them responsible for libels of which they could have no knowledge .
13 And they knew that they could expect no reinforcements from Scotland while they could have no certainty that a second force was not closing in behind them from England , since clearly their movements had been known , and their return anticipated .
14 And like John said if they , the way they come along here so fast if any child came out of their back gate they 'd have no chance .
15 ‘ We 've been told by distributors that if our films were French , they 'd have no trouble with them at all .
16 But as I said they need have no fear .
17 They had little hope of bringing up fresh provisions in these conditions , and if they lengthened their lines by a few more miles they would have no hope at all .
18 if anybody had seen the driver Jack Mills in the weeks after the robbery , as I did , they would have no admiration for these people
19 And even if the drivers had never visited London , they would have no excuse for mistaking the building ; the throng around it-was already twenty or thirty deep , spilling far over the pavement and into the street .
20 Most of the respondents answered this question in a similar manner ; it is perhaps disturbing that most companies feel they would have no way of knowing if a headhunter had abused their trust .
21 As Ilúvatar says of Aulë 's dwarves , they would have no being of their own , ‘ moving when [ he thinks ] to move them , and if [ his ] thought is elsewhere , standing idle ’ .
22 The " drug barons " , importing from Thailand , Pakistan , or Colombia , are seen as the real cause of increasing " hard " drug addiction in the UK , rather than the fact that they would have no market if there were no demand .
23 Members also felt the constitution was counter-productive , especially when capital projects called for an injection of cash over which they would have no control , and which was seen as improving someone else 's investment .
24 In these conditions , to encourage mass protest over which they would have no control appeared sheer lunacy .
25 If they are thrown off the land they will have no home or work .
26 But unless food reaches drought-stricken areas they will have no choice .
27 Bull confirmed that those taking unpaid leave will get a bonus proportional to the duration of their absence ( three months salary for a year , six months for two years , nine months for three years ) , but that they will have no guarantee of getting their job back after the leave .
28 They will have no guarantee of funding , will have to re-organise their affairs to take account of the changes and partnerships with the council formed over many years will be lost , ’ said Martin Sime , Director of the Scottish Council for Voluntary Organisations .
29 It is hard to imagine circumstances in the 1990s in which they will have no significance .
30 ‘ But they will have no experience of running pubs and I know from talking to the local bench that licensing magistrates are concerned at the standard of new licensees . ’
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