Example sentences of "[noun pl] have put [adv prt] [prep] " in BNC.

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1 As though I have n't got enough crisises to have to put up with .
2 Having recently came back from canoeing in Austria where canoeists , fishermen and landowners all enjoy what nature has provided , it certainly dates what canoeists have to put up with in parts of this country .
3 Excerpts from the letter read : ‘ All too often these days customers have to put up with defective and unsatisfactory goods , and , at best , an indifferent attitude by retailers and manufacturers to their problems and complaints .
4 Life was hell for unsuccessful acts ; not only did the performers have to put up with heckling and catcalls but they had to be agile enough to duck the rotten eggs and fruit thrown by a disgruntled audience .
5 Reluctantly Elinor said , ‘ I had the same problem with Daddy Billy , but in my day wives had to put up with that sort of thing .
6 Natural mothers had to put up with a great deal .
7 Before they get the chance to push eachother around in the ring , the 2 men have to put up with equally undignified treatment from the nation 's press .
8 At football matches or at confrontations at seaside resorts the police have to put up with a lot of abuse .
9 ‘ I do n't know , ’ Ellie denied numbly as she recognised the note Gramps had put in with the package to Mrs McMahon .
10 Others had to put up with less ideal locations , and this led to demand for the feng shui practitioner , whose skill was in improving the landscape by correct siting , ensuring that nothing took place to disturb the flows of energy .
11 The amount of sorrow , grief and hatred that gay men and women have to put up with just to SURVIVE instantly makes them infinitely stronger than you .
12 The fact that the Ceauşescus had countless colour televisions added to the perverse aspect of their superabundance since ordinary Romanians had to put up with only a couple of hours of black-and-white television each day — and that largely devoted to the doings of the residents of the Palaţul Primaverii .
13 But after he had left them Rain wondered whether Shildon might not want to see her about his MacQuillan inquiry , a matter other events had put out of her mind .
14 Most foreign politicians would be shocked by the conditions some MPs have to put up with , crammed together in dim corridors and insanitary Gothic broom-cupboards .
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