Example sentences of "have therefore [prep] " in BNC.

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1 Their perseverance revealed the obvious : needs and capacities continue to change after a person has been de-hospitalized or moved from the parental home to a group home — and the developmental role has therefore to be seen as a permanent not a temporary one .
2 Spanish America 's new narrative has therefore to be seen not only in its local context , but in wider terms as part of the evolution of modern fiction generally .
3 There has therefore to be an agency of repression , and a means of maintaining repressed experiences in the unconscious state .
4 The stability of the water has therefore to be taken into account in assessing the value of a water supply and the need for treatment before use .
5 The calculation has therefore to be discounted to allow for the various imponderants .
6 What basis what did you have therefore for your assessment that forty one thousand two hundred was okay ?
7 The gens had therefore to be a matrilineal group ; that is , a group to which you belong by claiming descent in the female line .
8 Communication with new readership had therefore to be by means of the vernacular .
9 It transpired that what this man really wanted to do was to strangle his mother , a desire which was both socially and morally unacceptable and had therefore to be repressed .
10 The ground had therefore to be carefully prepared ; the nobility had to be encouraged to rally to his cause , and the commons had to be persuaded to support it with grants of money .
11 The king-duke 's rights had therefore to be defended by his proctors at Paris and , above all , by the seneschals of Aquitaine themselves .
12 Baldwin 's reluctance had therefore to be set against a formidable opposition which had been allowed to solidify and organize itself in his absence .
13 To become righteous , a man had therefore to be cut and shaped , like the willow , into the bowl .
14 It is also relevant here that in the seventeenth and eighteenth centuries meetings between rulers were exceedingly rare ( Louis XIV never met William III , the Emperor Leopold I or Charles II of Spain , the rivals against whom he struggled for so long ) and negotiations between them had therefore to be conducted entirely through their diplomats .
15 This is particularly important when funding is limited and hard choices have therefore to be made .
16 These actions have therefore to be decided according to the law in force before the passing of the Act of 1976 — essentially the common law .
17 Such sales ( item 2 ) have therefore to be subtracted from the PSBR .
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