Example sentences of "[vb mod] never have a " in BNC.
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1 | Indeed , you should never have a window half open and leave the dog inside , effectively guarding the car . |
2 | We must never have a simplistic view of suffering . |
3 | And the way things were it might never have a name or a life of its own . |
4 | The owner of large , complex estates , who did not manage them personally , might never have a clear idea of his full income . |
5 | England until almost the 1850s , when sometimes labouring men , particularly in country districts , might never have a fire in their hearths or taste meat all week , and faced death if they trapped a rabbit on the local lord-of-the-manor 's land . |
6 | He might never have a better chance . |
7 | ‘ If that 's Will 's Dark Lady , he 'll never have a quiet , easy life ! ’ |
8 | ‘ She 'll never have a fat arse , ’ said Belinda . |
9 | Want to sing with a high pitched voice , you 'll never have a better chance . |
10 | and prove our Thomas wrong , he says I 'll never have a decent car . |
11 | But he 'll never have a mortgage . |
12 | She 'd never have a better opportunity . |
13 | He took it all for granted , and would never have a clue just how blessed he was . |
14 | ‘ We would never have a Labour government able to carry out a Labour programme — even when that programme had won far more votes than any of the other parties . ’ |
15 | Dawn astonished doctors by becoming pregnant as she waited for a hysterectomy after being told she would never have a child . |
16 | Some had lost faith in their marriage , some in hope for promotion , some on discovering that they would never have a child . |
17 | She would never have a confrontation but she would get things done her way . |
18 | Perhaps she would never have a child . |
19 | The doctors told me I would never have a child of my own . |
20 | I would never have a better diversion , I thought , then it did get better . |
21 | Without such research we shall never have a conclusive demonstration of the need ( or lack thereof ) to include other indicators in resource allocation to the NHS . |
22 | We shall never have a moment 's peace ! ’ |
23 | We 're articulate enough to fool ourselves that we 're nice people , but there 's a strong undercurrent to our thinking that encourages us to view people with a disability as lesser , and until we come to terms with that , we will never have a proper support system . |
24 | ‘ And one thing 's for sure , ’ she continued in her big voice , ‘ your mother will never have a cough . ’ |
25 | The head who plays the role of buffer or filter of communication between the school and the outside world will never have a well marketed school . |
26 | The kind of people who 'll order a guitar like this Manson will argue in reply that : ( a ) a production guitar will never have a handmade guitar 's combination of all the right bits with that extra edge of quality ; ( b ) it 's obviously better to go for a traditional design than some mutant battle-axe because you 're less likely to get sick of it and they 're a lot easier to customise further and there 's nothing better at fitting into virtually any style of music than an S-type or a T-type ; and ( c ) it 's their money , anyway . |
27 | Great Britain have never won the World Cup but after this summer 's titanic struggle for the Ashes and blessed with home advantage , Mal Reilly 's men will never have a better chance to take the trophy . |
28 | Affiliated to the FDR in September 1980 , the organization has made its position clear -market women will never have a decent life until there is a popular democratic government . |
29 | But whatever , we are keen on it now , we should always have been , and if you treat people at the work place just like dirt , if you continue to turn Britain into a sweat shop , drive down wages , drive down people 's rights , then you may get some form of external investment come into this country , but we will never compete with the Dutch and the Germans and the Scandinavians , and we will never have a happy and united country . |
30 | Breton and Wintrobe rightly point out that ‘ we will never have a good understanding of the working of public and private bureaucracies if a representation of the behaviour of bureaucrats requires as many models as there are bureaus ’ ( 1982 , pp. 27–8 ) . |