Example sentences of "have [to-vb] [adv] with " in BNC.
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1 | There is never a moment when Dustin gets as worried as Gary Cooper in High Noon , although , like Cooper , he has to cope singlehandedly with a number of killers , and is only saved at the final moment when his wife blasts the last opponent with a shotgun . |
2 | As such , he or she has to work closely with the creative people and with media : in some agencies this includes the media planning , too . |
3 | In the process of this the Commission has to work closely with national governments , and so it is clearly desirable that domestic and EC law should be mutually consistent . |
4 | It just has to walk downstairs with the Queen on a lead and sit beside her . |
5 | It has to do partly with the feeling , particularly powerful in the 19th century , that the proper role of education , at least at the top end , was to equip gentlemen to run the Empire ; and it seemed reasonable at the time to concentrate not upon mechanics , but upon grand ideals , and the classics were studied as if they were a form of theology , a way of revealing fundamental and lasting human truths This , perhaps , is why anti-science is strongest in Britain , because we took Empire most seriously . |
6 | This has to do both with what are called states of affairs , which we may take ultimately to be a matter of individual properties , and also what are called laws . |
7 | It has to do rather with the infinite , universal wholeness of all things , of that all-embracing totality which may or may not be labelled ‘ God ’ , but which includes and enfolds everything within itself . |
8 | There is still real concern about the nature of the assessment process , though now it has to do more with its extreme complexity than with the simplistic naïveté of the earlier proposals , and with the fundamental differences of approach that are emerging between the examiners and the curriculum planners . |
9 | And let me now posit this : ‘ dignity ’ has to do crucially with a butler 's ability not to abandon the professional being he inhabits . |
10 | There were some rumblings of dissatisfaction last Christmas about aspects of the catalogue ; though a market leader among seasonal book catalogues , it has to compete keenly with catalogues from other sectors . |
11 | If the Church is to keep its teenagers , especially , it has to compete successfully with many other attractions and activities which appeal to the young . |
12 | The craftsman has to interact emotionally with the pattern . |
13 | London had one of its worst thunderstorms , and she had had to cope alone with thirty women in varying stages of labour on the gynaecology ward . |
14 | It 's the first chance everyone has had to work together with the technology , and it shows . |
15 | She wrote to Jane at the start of her employment : ‘ There are two things I beg you to do : get your time each day in the fresh air and strictly limit the hours you spend on your work , which I have always had to do anyway with such a large family and it does make sense in the end . |
16 | In Russia , people have had to build mikvas secretly , some of them have built a hidden one t-n their home , and have had to live constantly with the fear of being discovered by the KGB who would imprison them because of it . |
17 | Er , if you slept in there you 'd have had to lay there with umbrella up ! |
18 | ‘ I do n't have to go overboard with delight . ’ |
19 | You 'll have to sit there with a book and you can |
20 | She could see by his self-satisfied expression that he intended to make himself a fixture , and somehow , despite her friendship with Elaine , the thought of having to work closely with James on a day-to-day basis made Christina 's flesh crawl . |
21 | You did n't have to tread softly with such as he and he wondered scornfully why the fellow 's face was lard-coloured . |
22 | At classroom level , the attention on some areas of the curriculum could sometimes be achieved only by the deliberate neglect of others , the reasons having to do partly with teachers ' attempts to conform to other advisory expectations : those relating to classroom organization . |
23 | The second , having to do only with the reproduction of the page in Unver 's book , is that it is necessarily small-scale , so that a number of the including several of the potentially most interesting ones , have proved to be unreadable . |
24 | It will have to start again with another jury . ’ |
25 | The official unions will have to compete directly with Solidarity for members , so they want to land the first blows . |
26 | Poor Carrie and Nick , having to live here with this rude , unfair man for the rest of the war . |
27 | He knew he would have to live afterwards with the vanquished . |
28 | In those days , the manure was distributed on the fields in heaps from a horse and cart and then you would have to follow behind with a handfork to rake it and spread it evenly . |
29 | At times , he seemed to have to cope single-handedly with everything that came from the Opposition . |
30 | But no , they had to go ahead with this rather inadequate data . ’ |