Example sentences of "[modal v] have [verb] [adv] with the " in BNC.

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1 Today we should have met up with the rest of the tribe but we are n't as fit as we might be .
2 Eleanor was right when she had said at the very beginning that he should have gone along with the corporate planning proposals to phase-out the UK Vehicle Division as a manufacturing operation .
3 The thing that saddens me is that we 're supposed to have a T U C , that organization is supposed to draw together the various trade unions and what are we seeing , an ideal opportunity slipped from our grasp when the miners were facing the issue of jobs to public service workers should have linked up with the miners and we should have took the government on
4 It should have coped easily with the impact .
5 The census of 1785 confirms that the Titfords were still on Pig Street , not having been driven out by the noise of falling stone or splintering wood ; not that noise would have been anything unusual for them — they already had Thomas Addams ' blacksmith 's shop down the street , and the ringing sound of metal on metal emanating from there must have mingled nicely with the constant clip-clop of horses ' hooves as Henry Webley went about his business as the Bristol carrier a few doors away .
6 We 'll have to carry on with the Week of the Lion tour if only to give there good people something to do .
7 ‘ You 'll have to check in with the policeman , ’ the Staff Nurse yelled after us .
8 But they might have run round with the mop and a bit of beeswax .
9 It 's late , I know , but Alan Fine might have come up with the answer .
10 ‘ They might have helped out with the work , but Robert has done much more — lent you his nurse for that pyometra and lent Ian to do my farm work — and he 's worked doubly hard himself .
11 Waugh might have agreed even with the complaint about surface faults , which he was shortly to concede in a new preface and expunge by revision .
12 Rufus looks great , could 've done more with the aliens
13 They could 've done more with the ‘ ol wizard too : unable to use most of the flashy weapons from the armoury , he accumulates huge amounts of dosh as he has nothing to spend it on .
14 On another day he could have gone home with the match ball . ’
15 He could have continued placidly with the life he had chosen , and would have excelled ; but telegrams of a peremptory nature , saying his mother 's illness had taken a turn for the worse and he must come , kept arriving from Colonel Carteret , and Paul had to leave his work , abandon lectures , and make the weary journey to London time and again , only to find Sophia weak but resigned , and reproachful for his having come at all .
16 Tacitus tells us that this incursion was into the territory of Rome 's allies , and this could place it in the lower Severn , where Caratacus could have linked up with the other group of dissidents in the south-west still smarting from the operations of Vespasian , who with his sea-borne mobility swept right along the south coast , taking the Britons by surprise .
17 Queen Mary had such an eye for antiques , you see , if she 'd seen them , she 'd have gone off with the lot .
18 The Indians had taken the radio telephones ( they 'd have gone off with the genny if they 'd had a crane ) and Caracas thought they 'd just broken down again so came as per normal .
19 But I 'm thinking , I 'm think I 've got this terrible feeling I 'd have to come on with the princess , if we 've just got married
20 Therefore they would have to carry on with the remaining group .
21 He knew he would have to live afterwards with the vanquished .
22 I was so needy at the time that I think I would have gone off with the first person who told me I was attractive and showed my affection .
23 I believe at Glastonbury he would have blended well with the bill : at Finsbury Park he stood out like a sore thumb .
24 If you 'd told me all those years ago , I would have grown up with the idea of another mother , perhaps miles away , perhaps just around the corner .
25 He knew he would have to go through with the nightly ritual .
26 Countries opting for soft membership would have to put up with the first , and find substitutes for the second — for instance , by setting ( and hitting ) targets for money-GDP , using both fiscal and monetary policies .
27 However , it would have harmonised nicely with the bodily secretions ( excretions ? ) of the infrequently washed bodies of the era .
28 Some women would have come downstairs with the poker at the ready . ’
29 If the approach was to impress the reported carloads of northern scouts , they would have returned home with the memory of short explosive bursts , close support play and dogged determination , but little else .
30 They had assumed without question that Eliot , the royalist and high churchman , would have sided automatically with the establishment or what was then called the ruling class .
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