Example sentences of "have [to-vb] to [noun] [prep] the " in BNC.

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1 ‘ Be careful not to wake the crowd that has to go to school in the morning . ’
2 ‘ The main message of this conference is that the Government has to get to grips with the legislation and put the blame firmly where it lies that is with the people who go out and break the law buying cigarettes . ’
3 At the end of the day , Neil has had to come to terms with the fact that he plays in a certain way …
4 He has had to come to terms with the tragic loss of friends from the very start of his climbing career , and while he responds politely to my questions on this subject , I do not pierce the necessary shroud of self-protection that surrounds such memories .
5 I know that the Society has had to come to terms with the implications of a decline in the support of Local Authorities for Adult Education classes .
6 Unlike plants and animals we do not have to go to bed with the sun or to get up at each high tide ; our man-made environment is based on a 24-hour solar day of course , but it need not be timed to coincide with sunrise or sunset .
7 He did not expect that he would have to go to war over the Holy Places , but if he was called upon to do so , he thought that he could produce the men , guns and money he would need for victory .
8 The hon. Gentleman will have to come to terms with the fact that there is an energy market to be supplied .
9 Often they say , ‘ I thought that I had been through all this and settled it in my mind ten years ago , yet here I am having to come to terms with the same issue all over again . ’
10 Many victims are also having to come to terms with the trauma while looking after children and the elderly in overcrowded refugee camps.Whether rape has been singled out by military commanders as a weapon of war remains open to question , but victims ' testimony suggests the abuse is part of a wider pattern of warfare and ‘ ethnic cleansing ’ .
11 Not only are they having to come to terms with the latest three per cent rise in fares and the implications of rail privatisation , but now the spectre of VAT hangs over them as well .
12 Although Charles 's own personal inclination was to refound a wide , comprehensive church able to encompass as many of the various denominations of the 1650s as possible , it was soon clear that the king would have to bow to pressure from the bishops , the conservative landowners , and their representatives in the Cavalier Parliament , who wished to see a more narrow restoration .
13 Having to adapt to changes in the school and to undergo a second deskilling .
14 You wonder what will have to happen to Shetland for the Government to act . ’
15 You used to have to go to London to the Old Bailey , giving evidence and anything like that .
16 I know we used to have to run to school in the morn er for the shopping in the morning .
17 And then , in the , I think it was the June , I came down to Colchester , and as soon as I got to Colchester the old adjutant nurse said oh you , going for a a B one qualification , and I had to go to Colchester to the Ordnance , it , it , it was an Ordnance workshops I suppose that was what it was .
18 The three who had to go to school in the morning went to bed .
19 For this escapade we had to go to Birmingham for the weekend .
20 His friends and colleagues were trying to persuade him at the time that this would not be wise — what on earth would happen to the British election campaign if the country had to go to war in the Gulf half-way through ?
21 We had to go to Thetford for the judging , and although we were quite good for a school of Debenham 's size .
22 President François Mitterrand had warned in December following the most recent city riots [ see p. 37869 ] that modern socialism had to come to grips with the management of urban society , and the worst affected local authorities had complained that they lacked resources and bore a heavy burden compared with more affluent areas .
23 ‘ I had to come to terms with the fact that I could lose my baby at any time to a foster mother .
24 In all cases English kings had to come to terms with the conditions which they found in these three different countries ; and in all cases they had to show an ability to adapt themselves and their armies to new conditions , military , social and economic , as well as to new thinking in the ways that armies were formed and war was fought .
25 Unlike Roman Catholics , who had to come to terms with the use of the vernacular , Anglicans had used English for four hundred years .
26 The popes had to come to terms with the nobles and those who came from the noble families of the city naturally built up their own families and factions in order to survive .
27 I have to go to Dublin for the nearest indoor courts .
28 Farmers have to come to terms with the market and look upon wholesalers and retailers as allies , not enemies .
29 In 1975 , just after reorganization had finally been implemented , and in the context of a great deal of criticism about its unexpected costs , Tony Crosland ( Secretary of State for the Environment ) announced that cuts were needed in local government spending : ‘ We have to come to terms with the harsh reality of the situation which we inherited .
30 They have to come to terms with the fact that there is a rival in the camp , a rival they would both love to remove but hate to lose because of his separate contributions to home life .
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