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

  Next page
No Sentence
1 Without it , she could not have given herself to him so completely .
2 He would have given anything for her unadulterated attention and approval .
3 If anything , by the end of the nineteenth century it was the expanding Polish population of the partition areas that needed living space , and the German Ostflucht might well have given it to them had it not been that Germany desperately needed to maintain the spluttering fiction of the drive to the east to divert and subvert internal political pressures .
4 And if the stranger had come to ask for his two pounds back , my sister would gladly have given it to him .
5 ‘ Who could have given it to her ?
6 No , he 'd have given it to her at the hospital .
7 I should n't have given it to you .
8 ‘ I 'll have given it for someone else who needs it just as badly , ’ Belinda finished for him .
9 ‘ You must have hated him for what he did . ’
10 ‘ He can have heard nothing of himself at all , ’ said Cadfael contentedly .
11 My friend must have heard it from him , and after you left remembered and telephoned me .
12 And if Thomas had been any older I do n't know quite how I would have explained it to him .
13 I wonder , if you 'd been at that dinner , would you have joined them in their scepticism .
14 There seems nothing at all strange about the Church , which paid the salaries of these men and expected them to serve it , considering the question of whether or not they should be able to engage in an activity which , no matter how acceptable , would have diverted them from their main task .
15 Aliens might have placed it in her , it might have burst out of her body rending her — it had done so .
16 but her do 's moved forward so she said I 'll have to borrow it before you
17 She had gone to his room ready to play the wanton , certainly believing she would have to seduce him into her arms , and there had been an undercurrent of panic at this .
18 He would have recognized her from her strong resemblance to her brother , although she looked the elder by some years .
19 ‘ It is not a birth-mark and , if I had rid myself of my preconceptions , I would have recognized it for what it is , on superficial examination of the subject . ’
20 Oh God they 'd look macha I 'd have to strap them under my arms !
21 Do I take it Councillor that they would not have received it without your visit ?
22 But I might have to cancel it on what , what Deborah 's said .
23 It seemed they could have everything merely because they were boys , they would not have to sacrifice anything for anything else .
24 Roman 's interruption held a note of such ferocious anger that in any other circumstances it would have stopped her in her tracks .
25 He may have had it planned as a mausoleum before his death or friends may have erected it to his memory .
26 He thought it was degenerate , that he 'd have to support me into my 30s . ’
27 Robert would have to hit him with something a bit more serious than doubts .
28 No doubt the grand-old Victorian would have reprimanded us for our thriftlessness , extravagance and improvidence .
29 I ca n't bear to let it out of my hands — I shall have to carry it with me to my appointment at the Commission …
30 He says the nineteen sixty-eight caravan act does n't include new-age travellers who are not traditional gypsies so we do n't have to provide anything for them by law .
  Next page