Example sentences of "[adv] that [pron] have [prep] " in BNC.

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1 We may not ask for help by weeping , but our bodies may become helpless so that we have to be helped .
2 Gripping the hammer in one fist and propping the hatch up with her free hand , she crouched low so that she had about an inch gap through which she could see the back door .
3 But within a few days , all her mother 's youth and vigour were gone and the energetic , independent woman whose health and dependability she had taken for granted for so long had turned into a helpless invalid , unable to hold down the thinnest gruel , unable to sleep more than a few minutes at a time , unable even to answer the calls of nature on her own , so that she had to be lifted like a child onto the pot and lifted back into the jumble of stinking bedclothes .
4 You can see that VMS has effectively concatenated the logical name , so that you have in effect typed DUA0 : [ SOFTWARE_LIBRARY . ]
5 The captain of the Serapis had meanwhile nailed his Red Ensign to its staff , so that it had to be torn down , when , around 10.30 pm , the English vessel , with five feet [ 1.5 m ] of water in its hold , its holed topsides open to the moonlight , and its rigging and sails almost cut away by gunfire , was forced to surrender .
6 This is not to say that the product is inferior , indeed many desktop publishing systems can do things that no typesetting equipment ever could , merely that it has to be recognised that the technology has its place .
7 This is not to say that the contributions which social scientists may make to solving particular technical problems , or enlarging the sphere of rational decision making , should be dismissed altogether ; only that they have to be seen in the wider context of political contestation and choice .
8 Delaney scrambled to his feet , lurching from the effects of shock and concussion , knowing only that he had to be sure ; had to see it dead .
9 To say that the Crown had the right of appointment is to say only that it had at least the possibility of a voice , not that it necessarily exercised any real right of selection .
10 Before he could get to the specimen , its entrails had decomposed so badly that they had to be thrown away , so it was a gutted specimen that he eventually saw .
11 ‘ Damian knew right away that it had to be Japan or nothing .
12 Generally that I had to be convinced any person posed a risk — and to give a warning before I fired . ’
13 ( It is significant that it could not be called ‘ Christ ’ but had to be given another name ; moreover that it had to be explained what this was , whereas a man on the cross would have required no explanation . )
14 H M Customs and Excise confirmed yesterday that they had to be implemented by 1 January 1990 .
15 By now they are probably nerves of iron because , you know , you have to co-exist with an army like that he has to really take it fairly easy because they can be quite rude and , you know , shove you around get whatever they want and very harmful methods .
16 He recognised that some understanding is given directly by God , but also that it has to be appropriated by human beings using their reason .
17 On 19 June 1841 the spire of St Michael 's was struck by lightning so severely that it had to be taken down and rebuilt at a cost of £84 , paid for by the Buxtons .
18 Now that we have in print the diary of his second wife , and his correspondence with Dame Margaret , Lloyd George 's private morality can be viewed in historical terms .
19 I realised just now that you had to be the one to finish it . ’
20 The standard WCC process is long : applications to start in Oct 1990 should theoretically be with Geneva by Oct 1989 , and before that they have to be approved by the relevant screening body within the student 's country ( usually the Council of churches ) and by the sending institution ( eg a church ) .
21 The door was smashed in so often that it had to be bricked up .
22 It was only when Gould declared on 28 February 1837 , that Darwin 's island specimens of the Galapagos mocking bird differed so profoundly that they had to be categorised as three completely distinct species , that the alarm bells began to ring .
23 This example illustrates well that one has to be aware of the range of possible treatments and restorations to which even perfectly genuine objects could have been subjected .
24 ‘ Now Bathsheba , ’ he said , laughing , ‘ you know very well that I had to be very careful , as a single man working for you , a good-looking young woman .
25 It is interesting here that we have in Dorothy Heathcote 's lesson an example of apparent free-play .
26 So it 's actually quite short , and you can see here that it has in fact been shortened , and also you can see the terrible stitching with which it was done .
27 When in 1857 something new began to grow in Nova Scotia Gardens , financed by Angela Burdett-Coutts at the prompting of Dickens , the residents protested so vehemently that they had to be pacified by the architect and restrained by the law .
28 ‘ Staff are told it has to be user-led and then that it has to be rationed and controlled ’ .
29 Sometimes the bible surprises us a little bit of course , and it puts it finger on things that we perhaps do n't really want to talk about or we do n't even consider as sins and the bible is quite clear that not all sins are what we do often there what we do n't do in parable that Jesus told concerning the traveller , the man who went down to Jericho , we do n't condemn the priest and the levite for what they did , but we do condemn them for what they did n't do , their sin was not what they did , it was what they left undone , going over and looking at the man was very note worthy , as least there was some interest there and we do n't condemn them for that , but we do condemn them for hurrying along and not reaching out and helping the man in the Pistol of James and chapter four and verse seventeen James says there , any one then who knows the good he ought to do and does n't do it , sins so the sins that you and I comment or the sins rather that we are guilty of are not just the things that we do there of times the things that we do n't do and sometimes there more difficult for us to put a finger on , we can justify them so very easily its been said that all it needs for evil to triumph , is for good men to say or to do nothing well lets look at the , that , illu illustration there that we have in the second book of kings .
30 Er I also have to reemphasize again that we have in no way we have made up our minds as to whether or not there should be a new settlement , but we have to proceed to discuss the issues as identified .
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