Example sentences of "[Wh adv] you [modal v] have a [noun sg] " in BNC.

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1 It was clear that he judged marriage — at least partly — as an additional burden in an already busy life : ‘ It is the most difficult thing , I think , trying to work out how you can have a family life as well as all the public demands that there are .
2 Everyone has had a reasonable work-out and we 've been very fortunate with the weather at a time of the year when you can have a lot of matches ruined by rain . ’
3 This is where you may have a problem , particularly if you are a first-time buyer , because the deposit payable is usually 5 per cent of the total value of the house , sometimes even 10 per cent .
4 And when Albert and Mister Johnny came in , she cut the pie and told them about the big fair that was held every Michaelmas in the Norfolk village where she had lived when she was a little girl about the gay gipsy carts and the fire eater , and the booth where you could have a tooth pulled for sixpence with a brass band to drown your screams ; about the two-headed calf and the Bearded Lady and the Toffee Woman .
5 For '90 there 'll be a beach party with picnic lunch and a cruise and there 's the Greek night , where you can have a go at some Greek dancing !
6 you know there 's Rigid Lake hotel there , it 's quite a nice place , where you can have a meal
7 ‘ No , ’ he said , ‘ there is no reason why you should have a clue .
8 After what he did to THE FACE , I do n't see why you should have a picture of him in the magazine .
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