Example sentences of "has [verb] [adv prt] to " in BNC.

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1 Unsure of whether she does owe him an explanation , of how much of her perspective she can get across in a conversation , and unwilling to let go of the London Kate who has broken through to the surface , she is ashamed of her suspicions of his reasons for asking her back to his place and agrees .
2 Coates ( 1985 , pp. 27 , 77 ) , for example , argues that in recent decades narrative has broken down to be replaced by a cinema of ‘ isolated heterogeneous events held together by the ramshackle constructions of Victorian melodrama ’ , and that from the mid-1960s we have seen the dissolution of the distinction between realist and non-realist film .
3 But I mean Alan has to go up to London !
4 SunPics , which still has to go over to SVR4 , should take longer , say the second half of 1993 .
5 they that has to go over to there , so
6 He is n't allowed to play football and has to go back to the hospital for treatment .
7 ‘ We 've only got her for five years , then she has to go back to the Foundling Hospital . ’
8 The twentieth-century preference for ‘ the colloquial ’ in poetry may well be a temporary phenomenon ; Donald Davie 's Purity of Diction in English Verse ( 1952 ) , together with his admiration for the late Augustans , represent one attempt to revive an interest in the use of a ‘ civilized ’ diction ; it is interesting that he has to go back to the age before Wordsworth .
9 To discover why Lindsey chose this particular aircraft from among many other types that were available , one has to go back to 1967 and Lindsey 's purchase of the ‘ Me 108 ’ .
10 ONE has to go back to Julius Caesar to understand Rome 's interest in Britain and the attitudes of the tribes of south-eastern Britain to Rome .
11 For comparison , one really has to go back to the Renaissance , to someone like Giovanni Bellini , who travelled an enormous territory ; even to Giotto , the artist who Matisse said was the peak of his aspiration .
12 ‘ Like everything else about Jean-Claude , one has to go back to his roots in la Sologne .
13 the reader has to go back to the previous stretch of discourse to establish what This refers to .
14 In the meantime he has to go back to the town on further business , but first his horse needs shoeing , his cart needs repairing and he needs food and shelter .
15 He says he 's feeling better but he has to go back to the hospice .
16 Both were successful in their task , Phyllisia no longer has to go back to the West Indies and Celie was reunited with all her family .
17 Thus the death of his father is not an event that impinges on a child only at one particular point : it may go on producing shock waves through its continuing effect on the mother , which in turn may bring about a different relationship with the child ; in addition there may be economic difficulties as a result of which the mother has to go out to work , a new home has to be found , and an altogether new lifestyle adopted .
18 But if it 's a lousy job and he has to go out to someone like
19 One only has to see Back to the Future to realize what problems could arise .
20 A few weeks ago I said there were 10 teams in contention , now I reckon it has whittled down to six .
21 TCCB chief executive Alan Smith said last night : ‘ Graham has flown out to India to do a job .
22 He calls Howard as soon as he arrives — but Howard has flown out to the Bahamas , for a conference with Bill Mishkin , who is stopping over on his way to Caracas .
23 Meanwhile , a team of doctors and nurses from one of the region 's biggest hospitals has flown out to Italy tonight , to treat the injured from Sarajevo .
24 ‘ Guy has flown back to London .
25 A reader has pointed out to me : ‘ It is quite unreasonable for you to criticise the scheme since it may not be generally known that any Senior Manager is able to purchase a top-of-the-range BMW K Series four-cylinder model anti-lock brakes , black paint finish , radio etc and still have funds to spare . ’
26 Professor Gilbert Kelling has pointed out to me that , in certain circumstances , bedding planes can be produced by textural and diagenetic differences within " continuous sedimentation " .
27 Given the losses and a circulation that has fallen back to 540,000 , in third place in the race behind the Sunday Times and The Sunday Telegraph , a premium price could not be expected .
28 The number of students who have entered chartered accountancy training contracts since the start of the 1992/93 academic year has fallen back to around 1982 levels , according to the Institute .
29 Suppose now , however , that B , having accepted S 's repudiation in June , sees the market beginning to rise rapidly in July and , in an attempt to minimise his loss before the market rises further , buys replacement goods on July 15 at £115 per ton — ; only to discover that by the delivery date under the original contract ( December 1 ) the market price has fallen back to £110 per ton .
30 President Berisha , however , has given in to the nationalists over the question of property restitution .
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