Example sentences of "[adv] have [verb] [adv prt] [prep] [art] " in BNC.

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1 SOCIAL ‘ Sociologists apparently have come round to the belief that 50 per cent of middle-class parents who send their children to private schools would be happy to put them in the state system if dinner money was renamed lunch money . ’
2 but we obviously have to cut off at a certain time to er get the accounts and audited in time .
3 But if you do feel like it , you only have to call in at the shop .
4 Not have to face up to the fact that he was a dynamic , intelligent , charming man with a gift for finance and the raw exercise of power .
5 It 's really not hard at all ; you just have to dive in at the deep end . ’
6 Well , all the types listed above have come out of the Soviet Union recently .
7 We usually have to queue up in the rain because Mr Barnes — our ‘ Supa-Tuta ’ — keeps the door locked until his arrival , to prevent vandalism ( although there are those who think that a spot of creative vandalism would smarten the place up a bit ! ) .
8 You 're preparing me to go out into the street , but I still have to go back to the system first .
9 For example , if you are catching the ball in front of the body , then you have the freedom to throw the ball in any direction but if you catch the ball behind the body , you still have to come back to the position to the front of the body and to do this takes more time .
10 Now yes this is very very welcome indeed , but I do see it Mr Chairman in the experience of the past and that really with the hard work that you both have put in as a piece of paper it is now in the computer as far as I can see and I think there is a term now within agriculture and I will give you an example of this and I think it now , it may apply I think to our road system particular particularly in the north , north Suffolk , yeah I think the term is set-aside , and I hope that some time central government will acknowledge that within this eastern region certainly the Lowestoft area and Waking area we have very great problems , because these pieces of jigsaw do not come into the full picture , they 're put in place now and then and later and in apparent it is giving us a very great problem certainly within the last
11 Not only are the most disadvantaged on the receiving end of most crime , argues Harrison , they also have to put up with the heaviest police presence .
12 Power stations , oil refineries , dairy farms , newspapers , hospitals , simply have to go on at the weekend , and often through nights as well as days .
13 Now the red blood cells and so on have leaked out into the surrounding tissues .
14 They too have passed over into the world of law , business , government and technology , where rational but secular goals and methods dominate .
15 He also said he is ‘ very optimistic ’ about the NCR computer division , where orders from Europe recently have picked up after a period of extreme softness .
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