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

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1 Then , set against the incredibly complicated French and Indian Wars , the actual story has Hawkeye falling in with the Brits as he falls for the daughter ( Stowe ) of a Scots officer .
2 It has records going back to the reign of Henry II in about 1165 .
3 The stories each picture told varied from the tragic to the hilarious : The expensive oil landscape which had had seagulls drawn on to the sky in ballpoint pen ; the ancient Highland cattle picture , swopped for food after the First World War by a travelling artist .
4 Similarly , Protagon have had tests carried out on the performance significance of being able to adjust string tensions .
5 As Figure 5.3 illustrates , it may be derived that teams which are not effectively constituted will have difficulty moving out of the forming and norming stages and that the majority of their time will be spent in these activities ( see Figure 5.4a ) .
6 Labour councillors say they would rather have flats backing on to the gardens than rats and rubbish .
7 We 'll have Anne tied up in the libraries for two or three days going through the periodical indexes , that 'll be another hundred plus whatever the xerox charges are . ’
8 There are certain associates , who 're not going to use a rate book , there 's associates who er , because you 're doing a two appointment sale , will always have time to come back to the office and get a computer quote and go back with the right answer .
9 Kate , still frightened she might be recognised , had chosen to have meals sent up to the apartment from the nearest restaurant .
10 Word of the display travelled fast and so many people were drawn to it that Porter International had difficulty keeping up with the crowds .
11 We had money left over from the Cow and Gate appeal and we are going to buy special waters and rehydration equipment for babies who have suffered from dysentery and diarrhoea . ’
12 Perhaps the biggest problem with the Severin thesis is that recent work in Mesoamerican archaeology , and the deciphering of Mayan hieroglyphic codes , make it clear that the classic Mayan civilisation ( AD300 to AD900 ) had precursors going back to the Olmecs in 1000BC and earlier .
13 Had IBM known back in the early 1980s what it knows now , it would have opened up its VM operating system , which also has its roots in development , but , coming from the button-down IBM world has many more security and management features than Unix started out with .
14 Not all the Lotus problems had been solved — the car was still very light at the front and had trouble coming out of the corners — but it was certainly thoroughly competitive and Fittipaldi 's confidence was high : especially when he won going away at Jarama in Spain , with only Ickx 's Ferrari providing any real opposition .
15 He had donkey rides out in the parking lot .
16 We 've time to get off up the Garngad . ’
17 Jane Pargeter said , nodding towards her open drinks cabinet , even before Blanche and Dexter had time to sit down on the black leather armchairs in her sitting-room .
18 I also had time to look around during the year and consider colours and character of growth .
19 There are easy comparisons : both have kids growing up in the same neighbourhood .
20 We have help going in alongside the United States and German Project Hope airlift , and we have £50 million for the know-how fund .
21 The family live near Hexham somewhere and they have connections going back to the early nineteenth century , ’ Constance said , quoting Miss Hatherby almost verbatim .
22 The engine is very durable ( the new Southern Region commuter trains have engines taken out of the trains they are replacing ) .
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