Example sentences of "to have [verb] for [det] " in BNC.

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1 There were n't any houses then and there was a big ditch where the canal side and erm we used to have to wait for each other , because no street lamps , nothing at all like that and er really we used to be afraid and then when the first bus ran , shall I tell you this , when the first bus ran from , from Bloxwich to Willenhall of course word got around that the buses were beginning , because the roads were only ruts , they were n't tarmacked roads then and it was certainly gentlemen first for the first there were about three hundred waiting that was a lot of at the top is it Street , I think it 's that and all the gentlemen were first but we , some of us managed to scramble on , but erm then they used to break down very very often because the roads the roads were in such a terrible condition they were only ruts .
2 Though debt-for-equity swaps represent one way for banks to recover part of their developing country debt exposure , they still stand to lose money and look likely to have to wait for some years before they can cash in their equity stakes .
3 ‘ Value billing ’ should , in theory , be a consequence of the value-added auditing service that most firms claim to have offered for several years .
4 But other righteous causes are going to have to look for another way to organise .
5 The shepherd answered that they were , and the emperor cried ‘ Now I am going to have to sleep for another hundred years ! ’
6 he ought to have stayed for several days .
7 Scotland , one fears , are going to have to hope for some snell April blasts for the Fijians to feel uncomfortable at Murrayfield when the Rugby World Cup Sevens are staged next month .
8 Roy won four full International caps for Northern Ireland , is the only Palace player ever to have appeared for that country and was the first 3rd Division player to be selected for a full international .
9 ‘ Headway Intermediate is one of the soundest , most innovative coursebooks to have appeared for some time . ’
10 ‘ And I 'm afraid you are going to have to pay for that sinful act .
11 There was a time when parents had a repertoire of such material ‘ in their heads ’ , but the oral handing down seems to have failed for many people .
12 Overall it would appear to have accounted for less than a tenth of the income of spiritualities ; in seven Norfolk parishes in 1658 the glebe varied from one-eighth to two-thirds of the living , though the average scarcely exceeded a quarter ; acreages ranged from one to fifty-two with a median of twenty-four in these and three other parishes .
13 Excitement indeed ! and it even caught up a sober and spiritually distanced Quaker who could not " find words sufficient to draw it in colours strong enough " but has left a useful description of a phenomenon which seems to have lasted for several weeks , " when the great noise subsided , but the fire still existed " .
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