Example sentences of "to have [noun] for the " in BNC.

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1 He 's about as likely to have sympathy for the devil as he is to have satisfaction .
2 Where , however , they are found in a specially negotiated contract between two companies , the court is unlikely to have sympathy for the party who has missed the deadline .
3 In the winter of 1956 , he was further irritated by problems with his teeth : he was about to have X-rays for the three which remained to him .
4 The physiotherapist has to have enthusiasm for the task she and the patient are undertaking .
5 ‘ When they told me what it was , I thought I was going to have to have injections for the rest of my life . ’
6 With their insistent anti-Polish , anti-Jewish and anti-Communist propaganda , their apparently radical economic policies , their contempt for the ‘ weakness ’ of Weimar democracy , their emphasis on military virtues and their theories of racial supremacy , the Nazis appeared to have solutions for the problems that beset the Reich .
7 A ‘ good ’ book needs to have meaning for the individual reader and it must bring meaning to what is experienced in our daily lives .
8 Another change , which was to have implications for the course of British town planning , lay in the shifts of economic fortune between regions .
9 The study is expected to have implications for the design of information systems , for the targets that are set to evaluate investment decisions and for finding ways of correctly assessing risk .
10 ‘ These additional risks were likely to have implications for the success of an already challenging project .
11 AIB is too small an organisation to have room for the pure academic whose theoretical knowledge may be most profound but whose practical knowledge is limited .
12 Changes in the social environment were not the only consequences of the Industrial Revolution to have importance for the development of local government .
13 ‘ You 've got to have thongs for the beach .
14 The businessman shall not be required to have security for the loan .
15 Such heroic examples , concluded Brougham , looking both backwards and forwards in 1822 , permitted reformers to have confidence for the future .
16 Lyonnais des Eaux already owns the two big statutory water companies in Northumbrian 's region and is bound to have ambitions for the region as a whole .
17 We can hardly expect adolescents to have respect for the possessions of others if they have no hope of attaining any of their own .
18 Andre says it is dangerous but you have to have respect for the sea it can be hard and punishing …
19 ‘ Every competitor has to have respect for the opposition .
20 That that 's how it it started , that 's why they were n't part of the force , is , police were part of a co community , and therefore to have respect for the police , seems to me quite vital if we are to have a real sense of of of justice and and fairness .
21 Cases of the latter type , where the adjective is used only to aid identification and does not actually apply to the entity of the phrase , closely resemble the great bulk of noun + noun phrases in their structural value , examples such as : ( 11 ) army manoeuvres the piano factory a sea monster an angle bracket However , even among noun + noun phrases , certain specimens occur which are clearly analogous to the former type ; as in : ( 12 ) a doctor journalist ( or doctor-journalist ) Chancellor Kohl a bed-settee These would permit an affirmative answer to our diagnostic test , although normally it is necessary to allow a little leeway in the shape of an added determiner to allow for this requirement of English : ( 13 ) Maurice is a journalist and he is also a doctor 2.3 It would be useful to have names for the two types of adjectival use , and there are fortunately two terms available which fall in the right semantic area and which have not been pre-empted for any other widely accepted technical linguistic purpose .
22 It is still considered necessary to have centres for the active treatment of the mentally disordered and for the long-term care of chronic cases .
23 Basically the idea is that in sectors where it is not feasible to have competition in the market place ( with all the associated incentives to efficient performance ) then it may nevertheless be possible to have competition for the market .
24 A recently published account of this initiative suggests , using quite tough performance measures , a considerable measure of success for this initiative , which surely ought to have lessons for the NHS in London after Tomlinson .
25 Thus , a man 's not treating a woman as autonomous in love-making is likely to have consequences for the way he treats her elsewhere .
26 It is not satisfactory to change a policy such as that which we have at the moment , and to have add-ons for the environment .
27 Taking advantage of the disordered and uncertain state of things it is not surprising that some mineral " owners " felt they ought to have reward for the working of minerals on their land , and there is little doubt that legal issues could and did arise where such " illegal " mining was detected .
28 Or , to take it further , had he begun to have hopes for the remainder of the night , and so taken this means to get rid of the other man ?
29 Admittedly the Supplement devotes space to provision for cycling and it repeats DB32 ‘ s general advice to have regard for the special road and footpath layout requirements that might result from the consideration of bus routes and stops .
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