Example sentences of "[noun sg] have to take " in BNC.

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31 To construct table 5.2 the first step the cost accountant has to take is to construct the rival 's experience curve which reflects the learning rate of 80 per cent .
32 The reason for this is that sperm production takes place at a temperature a couple of degrees lower than body temperature , so the process has to take place outside the body to function properly .
33 The person who dies must normally have been resident in the United Kingdom , and the funeral has to take place in the UK .
34 A good agent really understands the route a band has to take and must have a great relationship with his or her promoters to persuade them to believe in an artist .
35 Why does the postman have to take all the letters away ?
36 In deciding what procedures to use the project team had to take into account the fact that few of the schools associated with the study were likely to have moved towards a Cockcroft curriculum .
37 Because , for Aquinas , there was a limit to what could be known of God by reason alone , and a point where faith and revelation had to take over , physical knowledge was subordinate to metaphysical knowledge , and ultimately to faith .
38 I thought that was terrific , but the sergeant in charge had to take 5 months over paperwork to get them into court .
39 Man 's mind yearns for a rural existence — where 99.999% of his evolution occurred — but for many of us , mind and body have to take the daily buffets of urban , industrial civilization .
40 It is not self-evident that all clarifications or developments of the laws of war have to take the familiar form of multilateral conventions .
41 The therapist has to take all your details and to ask you certain questions to establish that you are indeed a suitable subject for hypnosis .
42 The head has to take the chance and to trust that an opportunity will in the end turn out to have been well handled .
43 Only a minority entered the kinds of jobs for which they had originally hoped and the rest had to take what they could get .
44 The duty was a subjective one , as in considering whether it had been broken , the court had to take account of the resources of the occupier .
45 Progress within bondage had to take precedence over liberation to secure the safety of any eventual freedom .
46 To get to their proposed operational area the convoy had to take a difficult route .
47 His wife had to take him home to Cheshire .
48 The station had to take account of both the realities and the aspirations of imperial power , the prestige of conquerors and the pride of colonizers , together with class and racial distinctions and economic necessities .
49 This is not to say that a science and technological education had to take on this character , for clearly there were and always have been those who are committed to inspiring in students a love of , and a care for , their subjects in those disciplines .
50 Understandably , the expert systems did not assist the experts a great deal but came into their own when both of the 2 experts were not available and an inexperienced technician had to take over .
51 Until the passing of the 1968 Act , there was no general time limit within which development had to take place ; unless a specific condition was imposed .
52 it did n't seem last night had to take it off her
53 What plans does my hon. Friend have to take up the 20 ecu supplement to the suckler cow premium agreed by the Council of Ministers on 11 December ?
54 The design of policy has to take into account the ambiguity of the welfare analysis outlined in the previous section .
55 For him , critical writing has to take up wider issues than enjoyment of a picture or a sculpture .
56 It seems beyond question that any sensible approach to the teaching of writing has to take account of the process of writing .
57 To cope with this , the father has to take a very active part in housekeeping and child-rearing , violating traditional conceptions of gender roles .
58 ‘ If the woman has to take money out of her purse then she has to use two hands and children can easily stray . ’
59 Today 's quarry owner has to take account of the environmental issues his predecessor could safely ignore .
60 In particular , when the creature has to take account of a wide range of structural differences and similarities between distinct situations ( as opposed to concentrating on only one or a few physical parameters ) , these structural features can only be represented symbolically — for , by hypothesis , they have no physical features in common .
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