Example sentences of "[vb mod] have [prep] [adj] [noun] " in BNC.

  Next page
No Sentence
1 SCOTVEC is able to offer assistance and advice on the form and content that such training should have for individual qualifications .
2 And there is debate and notable disagreement about the consequences that elections not only do have but should have for public policy .
3 To me , he wrote on 10 February as follows , the invective being tempered by the desire expressed at the beginning that we should have in due course a prolonged tête-à-tête :
4 We get a glimpse of it when Curtis argues , in support of his view that America should have Near Eastern mandates , that this would place her advantageously for the regeneration of post-revolutionary Russia ; as ‘ steward of the Near East ’ , she could ‘ extend to the blind giant the neighbourly hand of a friendship which is open to no suspicion ’ .
5 Now you must have at some time or other in advertising closed the deal on the phone .
6 But I must have aged 20 years out there .
7 If this is something we experience as adults , how much more impact reading materials must have upon young readers — readers who are that much more receptive and who are at stages of rapid and profound development .
8 I said , we 'll have to first time and yet it 's all he wants and he was gon na take a day 's pay off .
9 gone to sleep if you were alright No never mind and you 're going the doctor 's we 'll make appointment tomorrow cos you wo n't and if I make one you 'll have to blooming go and do it .
10 If you do get a drink , she 'll make a pot , and it 'll have like one tea-bag in it .
11 Rational people will predict them and thereby annul any effect they might have on real variables .
12 Terry Sangwin , the nurse manager for the medical unit , thought staff in the hospital still needed much more information about what would happen , and she feared the planners did n't realise the impact community care might have on acute hospitals .
13 They also warned against the cumulative effect that any US reforms might have on future profitability .
14 It was no part of Owen 's plan to let his whole company lurk there , now that they were compromised ; in case of close inquiry that would have been all too clear an indication of Llewelyn 's unofficial complicity in the enterprise , and however little doubt Isambard himself might have on that head , it would not do to let it be established and admitted .
15 We believe the need to consider the impact that refusing to permit minerals applications might have on local economies is adequately covered by the requirement to demonstrate they are ‘ in the public interest ’ ( MPG6 , paragraph 63 ) .
16 We believe the need to consider the impact that refusing to permit minerals applications might have on local economies is adequately covered by the requirement to demonstrate they are ‘ in the public interest ’ ( MPG6 , paragraph 63 ) .
17 The greatest insecurity lingering in investors ' minds was the lack of effect the rate rises had on the dollar 's ascent and the inflationary implications this might have for European economies .
18 Such a restructuring of the education system is something that Warnock ( 1988 ) points to as being long overdue , but she makes only fleeting references to the implications that this might have for special needs .
19 In the interbank market , banks offer surplus deposits which they might have to other banks .
20 But possibly not ; the rain , and the town between , might have to some extent blanketed the noise , from the camp .
21 Occasionally a charge on a shield of arms , or the interpretation of a crest can be an important clue in the determination of seignorial affiliation , in linking two families with different names , or suggesting a hitherto unsuspected landholding , quite apart from the visual attraction an achievement might have as stained glass , stone carving or hatchment in the local church .
22 They must be attentive to all the susceptibilities that people might have in this connection , and ensure that all of them played a part in resolving the tasks that arose in a society of this kind .
23 I could have at one stage recited to you every discharge from [ the estuary upstream for fifty miles ] on the north bank of the river , in order .
24 ‘ If I could have in any way , I would have killed him . ’
25 I have a super research team one of the best you could have in this country , equipment , materials , laboratory space , so why move ? ’
26 The demand curve DD tells us the marginal value product of labour , the extra benefit society could have from extra goods produced .
27 I do not want any criticisms that we may have of some home owners or some trends to detract from that important fact .
28 a fixed-term contract for one year or more entered into from 1 October 1980 can include an agreement in writing by you to exclude any claim that you may have for unfair dismissal , where your dismissal consists only of the expiry of the term ;
29 a fixed-term contract for one year or more entered into from 1 October 1980 can include an agreement in writing by you to exclude any claim that you may have for unfair dismissal , where your dismissal consists only of the expiry of the term ;
30 Alterations in class composition around this time may have to some extent re-ordered the direction of artistic patronage .
  Next page