Example sentences of "[noun] [adv] had to " in BNC.

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1 When in position the confection obviously had to be protected from the effects of the sea water until the frogman had positioned the mine and was ready to ‘ an ’ it .
2 There was a lot more professionalism to his jumping as , travelling strongly throughout , the top weight only had to be shaken up after the last to beat previous winner Wellknown Character two and a half lengths .
3 Mr Koch soon had to back-track .
4 The rent still had to be paid and it was impossible to sell the lease with so much property available .
5 TRAINING Running costs had already been identified in the business plan although funds still had to be released officially from the health authority budget .
6 The non-renewal of ‘ intervention ’ against Afghanistan also had to be reliable and guaranteed .
7 Concentration now had to be aimed at the means of transporting the aircraft from the field to the carrier in Glasgow .
8 First , this study simply had to be controlled in scope .
9 The nature of the urban crisis , to which town planning was addressed , also changed in that housing solutions increasingly had to be prepared in recognition of public opinion .
10 Policewomen sometimes had to be called from other duties in order to deal with an incident which male colleagues felt incapable of handling .
11 A claim for money generally had to be substantiated by evidence of careful planning , identification of areas of shortfall , prioritising and cost-effective exercises .
12 The myth of a Maronite majority thus had to be accepted by the Muslims for Lebanon 's ‘ democracy ’ to work .
13 That pretty girl just had to be Gaynor Summer 's sister , and , sure enough , that was where she went .
14 ‘ Willy Thorne , for example took part in a ProAm game at Alsager and insisted that one of the three charities who were to receive donations just had to be the Rainbow Trust and that meant £1,400 cheque .
15 Your shoes always had to be clean , brushed , you see ?
16 Because of the division of labour , work soon became the perpetual repetition of a simple task , or the minding of a machine ; such work often had to be done for fourteen hours a day , six days a week , and there were no special provisions for the women and very young children who were considered especially suitable for work in the textile industries .
17 In the UK , for example , economic expans-ions often had to be cut short by restrictive domestic policies as an increased demand for imports led to a deterioration in the balance of payments .
18 In his usual cold manner , Falkenhayn summed up the March results as follows : ‘ owing to the peculiar conformation we could not use these successes to bring our artillery far enough forward , and consequently the preparatory work here had to be continued . ’
19 Under all this pressure , the council simply had to relent and change its policy .
20 The response of the defendants then had to be looked at .
21 As one friend notes : ‘ Sarah always had to be the best at everything .
22 Storerooms and chairs could be found anywhere but the cinematograph still had to be acquired as of course did the films themselves , which the writer did not even deign to mention .
23 Benjamin and Elizabeth and their family belonged , in effect , to what we might choose to call the ‘ comfortable working class ’ ; they benefited from the general rise in Britain 's prosperity in Victorian times — cheaper food and clothing , better sanitation , faster transport , more substantial housing — but their money still had to be earned , had to be worked for .
24 I wondered whether it could be drugs — that a caddie perhaps had to be made privy to , because the golfer had to be topped up during the round .
25 The core of their problem was that such a device necessarily had to be a computer and a powerful one .
26 These advantages appear to me to outweigh the disadvantages identified by Mr of there being more outsiders in the family household , possibly homesick and unhappy carers who are not living in their own homes , but at the establishment and the trouble and worry to the of what would be not infrequent , recruitment of new carers for Mrs , I hope perhaps a trifle pessimistically thought that on average carers would not spend more than about a year of course , some longer , some shorter , because such carers necessarily had to be fairly young , fit , strong people and the stresses and strains of the er the whole business she thought would lead to reasonably rapid turnover , not the emergence of long-term carers who might stay for a number of years , er , as I say I 'd rather hoped that she may be unduly pessimistic about that , but , that , I accept what she says about it .
27 But , although the business generally had to be won at lower margins in the face of stiffer competition , our performance should have been very much better , and would have been had we responded more promptly to market fluctuations .
28 Downing Street said the details of the meeting still had to be arranged , including whether the Prime Minister wanted to be filmed with Mr Rushdie .
29 This shift from a conflictual dyadic political structure is not simply a question of historical change , of the recent appearance of ‘ minorities ’ : after all the slave was already constituted simultaneously according to different groups ( for example male or female ) , the Lumpenproletariat always had to be excluded .
30 I wondered if John Wayne ever had to .
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