Example sentences of "[noun pl] i have " in BNC.

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1 That , wrote Harsnet , is part of the reason why I have chosen glass and not canvas or wood , that is why in my notes I have called it a delay in glass , which is to say a refusal of shit .
2 That does not mean , he wrote , that if the body does not protest the project necessarily has any value , though for reasons I have gone into already it is necessary to put such thoughts out of mind , they can not help , they can only hinder , they can not water , they can only blight .
3 For largely sentimental reasons I have usually voted Liberal .
4 In my view , for reasons I have set forth at length elsewhere , I believe that the philosophy of animal rights is the right philosophy .
5 I am afraid that this war , which started for all the reasons I have mentioned , is turning gradually into a similar kind of war to the Lebanese .
6 For these reasons I have considered anxiously whether , if the law should be held not to provide to a local government authority the right to sue for libel , the need for adequate protection of the reputation of such an authority would be sufficiently met by other remedies .
7 It is also true that proceedings by way of injunction are not the only form of proceedings open to a local authority under the section ; but , unlike Mann L.J. , I am not impressed by that fact , because , in practice , for reasons I have previously given , the circumstances in which injunction proceedings may be successfully brought by a local authority are such that no other proceedings will be effective to enforce the law .
8 In my opinion , for the reasons I have given , it should be held so to apply .
9 For the reasons I have given , I am of the opinion that he was also correct to hold that it was a matter within his discretion to decide whether or not to require the local authority to give an undertaking in damages .
10 For the reasons I have stated above , a contrary intention does appear from the subject and the purpose of the provisions .
11 It was pointed out in argument that , pursuant to regulation 7 of the Income Tax ( Building Societies ) Regulations 1986 , tax which was due but not paid on or before the due date could have been the subject of an assessment on Woolwich under paragraph 4(2) or ( 3 ) of Schedule 20 to the Finance Act 1972 ; but for the reasons I have already given any such assessment would , in my opinion , have been a nullity in the circumstances of the present case .
12 But I wish to observe that , if there was no such agreement , then , for the reasons I have given , there is no statutory basis for the discretionary repayment of the money by the revenue .
13 Nor do I think it necessary to consider for the purposes of the present case to what extent the common law may provide the public authority with a defence to a claim for the repayment of money so paid ; though for the reasons I have already given , I do not consider that the principle of recovery should be inapplicable simply because the citizen has paid the money under a mistake of law .
14 For the reasons I have given and subject to one or two further points , I would let mandamus go and order the coroner to hold an inquest .
15 It is , for the reasons I have given , not sufficient in this case to point to the medical cause of death alone when considering the question ‘ how . ’
16 For the reasons I have given I would grant the application .
17 For the reasons I have given , I conclude that if ( but only if ) Lautro did not afford to a person or firm served with an intervention notice in accordance with rule 7.3(12) the opportunity to apply to the board to rescind the notice , and/or to appeal against it , then the lack of such remedies would be unfair and the procedure unlawful .
18 Although I consider that at the relevant time Lautro 's Rules , and thus its procedure , were defective in the respects I have outlined , for the reasons I have given I conclude that Lautro were not required by law to afford to Winchester the opportunity to make representations as to why an intervention notice should not be served before deciding whether or not to serve such a notice .
19 In my opinion , and for the reasons I have tried to formulate , such a refusal would not be consonant with relevant legal principles as they have developed and have been applied in the last 50 years .
20 I would respectfully agree , save that , for the reasons I have given , I do not think the case would come within paragraph ( d ) .
21 For the reasons I have given I would dismiss this appeal .
22 For all these reasons I have come to the conclusion , and I hold , that section 39 does override the injunction .
23 For these reasons I have come to the conclusion and I hold , that the banks have failed to bring their case within article 5(3) .
24 For these reasons I have come to the conclusion , and I hold , that the banks have failed to bring themselves within article 6(1) .
25 For the reasons I have given , as a matter of pure law this House should look at Hansard and give effect to the Parliamentary intention it discloses in deciding the appeal .
26 For the reasons I have given , in my judgment reference to Parliamentary materials for the purpose of construing legislation does not breach article 9 of the Bill of Rights .
27 The reasons I have cited make a largely self interested case for not fundholding .
28 One can not use the fundamental laws to deduce human behavior , for the reasons I have explained .
29 A few examples will give something of the flavour of the times : Even sober-minded mathematical modellers fell under the spell , as witness the mathematician J. S. Griffith who had helped Watson and Crick solve DNA back in the early 1950s , writing jointly with one of the doyens of biochemistry , Henry Mahler , and offering what they called , for reasons I have never quite understood , a ‘ DNA ticketing theory of memory ’ .
30 I support the measure , but for those reasons I have no confidence that the Bill will make more than a very small difference .
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