Example sentences of "[verb] have all " in BNC.

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1 The choice they make has all kinds of consequences — whether they 'll be up or down , whether they 'll be fit to drive or fit to live , and whether they are risking a criminal record .
2 Nevertheless , the party with an honest policy and a swing to its campaign will be defeated by the party whose centrepiece is dishonest , and whose campaign has had all the swagger of a bedraggled old hen in a muddy farmyard .
3 When the opera is finished , it is rehearsed and if these stupid Frenchmen do not like it , it is not performed — and the composer has had all his trouble for nothing .
4 Increasing unemployment in the cities has had all kinds of unfortunate consequences : it reduces demand for such services as retailing , while at the same time increasing pressures on public-sector provision ; and social services , housing training and education encounter increased demands for certain activities .
5 The Guinness Book Of Records has had all its records stolen .
6 Dunlop rode the Honda which Gawley has had all year and the plan was for Gawley to take over the bike and ride it at Donington .
7 It may be possible to delete this provision if the Purchaser can be satisfied that it has had all the Business 's contracts disclosed to it one way or another .
8 " Supernatural " has had all kinds of misleading innuendoes associated with it — such as a separation between this world and another higher one .
9 A man accused of stealing money from a Gulf War charity has had all charges against him dropped .
10 Nanna wants to have all the er plants picked out of the greenhouse and erm have them all in the trays and up to us by the end of May before they go away on holiday .
11 I told him the maps we should need , and he promised to have all the necessary Ordnance map sheets ready .
12 Then there was plenty of work for them but then when the erm , the one man buses really got going and they introduced the night safe on the buses , the ticket office was cut drastically , they did n't need to have all this information .
13 After the third demonstration , Charles said he 'd better go , and Dottie , recognising that she 'd had all she was getting , took a sleeping pill and let him .
14 ‘ And when you got back here , everyone could see that Walter was just a shell , just a husk you 'd had all the goodness out of .
15 If you 'd had all people come in and try to bring in new ideas on to an old system , I do n't think it would have worked .
16 Uncle Willi , she was sure , would totally understand about being in love , even though he was Georg 's father , but he would n't understand that you had to be in love on the one night of his party , not when you 'd had all those other evenings with Gesner .
17 She 'd had all of four or five hours , before she 'd come rushing after him like a lovelorn schoolgirl …
18 Time after time , people would slowly open a drawer and give me something they knew perfectly well they 'd had all the time I 'd been visiting them and talking to them , but the moment was now right .
19 because I 'd had medical Yeah it was cos I 'd had all these operations .
20 he was like being shy but he 'd had all the side of his fur like shaved , and I thought urgh !
21 As I struggled to follow her directions my natural curiosity overcame me and I asked her how she came to have all that wool and all those knitted garments which were obviously not for her .
22 The American sexologist , professor J L McCary , devised a pudding which seemed to have all the best attributes of an effective aphrodisiac .
23 THIS ALBUM 'S predecessor , ‘ The Psychedelic Years ’ , was possibly the best compilation album ever , in the sense that it contained the best songs by the best bands in its field of reference ; in fact , it seemed to have all the good songs that came out of psychedelia ( It also had The Incredible String Band , but presumably only as a sorbet to clear the palate .
24 He seemed to have all the answers , all the zeal … ( he was ) the structural engineer of Reaganomics . ’
25 As he said himself , with something of a mixed metaphor : ‘ The baby seemed to have all its parts but was liable to fall to pieces in the hand . ’
26 Havelock Wilson records the tactics of both sides in Liverpool in June and July 1889 : " I saw some of the principal owners at the beginning and endeavoured to have all questions settled on conciliatory lines .
27 There is also the practical point that an investor wishing to share in the fortunes of say , the oil service industry is better off buying Schlumberger straight than Pearson , which is seen to have all that publishing clutter .
28 At levels that betray the actual position of atoms , the surface of a crystal is seen to have all the regularity of a machine-woven piece of herringbone tweed .
29 We 've got to have all the facts . ’
30 Do n't let it come across like that , the temptation is to think that you 've got to have all this bit up here , now you do n't want this up here because it 's very difficult to cope with once you 've tied it round to get it round the elbow , you want the least amount that you can get , just cover the arm and then it makes it much easier to deal with at the end .
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