Example sentences of "we have [adj] " in BNC.

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1 We have 10 years to make the decisions which could save the planet .
2 It 's out on video on Nov 2 , and we have 10 cassettes to give away .
3 Ticket prices are £7.50 but we have 10 pairs valid for the first day of the show ( Thursday 10 December ) to give away .
4 We have 10 Boots Two-Hour Multi-Chargers , worth £19.99 each , plus packs of four batteries ( £6.99 ) or the first readers whose names are drawn from the postbag .
5 We have 10 Swish Powerglydes to give away to subscribers .
6 This sophisticated styler is attractively designed in gold and black , and has a matching black plug and usually costs £8.99 but we have 10 to give away free .
7 Normally priced at £19.95 , we have 10 Free Curl cordless combination Brush and Tong stylers to give away !
8 We have 10 to give away to readers who send a postcard to ( FM/PR ) , 72 Broadwick St , London W1V 2BP by 28 Feb .
9 We have 10 sets worth £45 each , send a postcard with name and address to GH ( JA ) , 72 Broadwick Street , W1V 2BP by 31 January .
10 So , for example , if we have 10 on 11 body text we might have 11 on 11 sub-headings and 20 on 22 major headings .
11 We have 10 of those aircraft in service .
12 We have similar difficulties when we look at such aspects as soul and intelligence : these have a profound effect on our daily existence , yet we have problems whenever we try to quantify them .
13 We have similar responses to a wide variety of experience , from talking to someone new at a party to taking an exam .
14 In West Yorkshire to the South we have similar problems of inner city decline and there as we understand it the authorities wish to cater for their housing needs .
15 resulted in the controllers making … a puritan attack directed at the drug taking of the ( underground ) movement ; and since the drug-scene is complex and confused , and we have little time in which to develop a reliable folk-lore about drugs and how to take them ( as we have long ago done about alcohol ) , they have been particularly successful in fostering anxiety among teachers , parents and establishment figures .
16 But in the ghosts of the house ‘ we have little interest … ‘ , he wrote .
17 Their role as the principal form of money for over two millennia means they can tell us about economies for which we have little or no written evidence , and the fact that they were mass-produced and have survived in such large numbers offers the opportunity to approach the economic history of some societies in a quantitative way .
18 Apart from Perrot , whose Giselle has survived , we have little or no idea what these choreographers were like .
19 At this point , where we have little or no capacity left to discriminate , we become almost unable to feel anything , whether good or bad .
20 Such communications may clearly show signs of similarity to our own human allocation of emotions and feelings — anger , affection , dominance and so on — but of how a chimpanzee actually feels anger , we have little comprehension .
21 No doubt this is all a part of nature 's design to keep the community together , but of how a chimpanzee 's inner mind is structured , and of how they feel , we have little notion .
22 Unfortunately , we have little continuous idea of the quality or quantity of church life ; the bishops and local abbots occur in any records only as witnesses to charters and other documents .
23 Murder and crowd violence there was , although we have little real information about it .
24 Because we are engaged in practical actions of great complexity , which we nevertheless ‘ pull off ’ day after day , we have little time to stand back and analyse how we do all the things that we do .
25 Unfortunately , since the brains of dead people rot swiftly , we have little notion of the degree of crenulation of the Neanderthal or Cro-Magnon brain .
26 It is in this area that more clinical research might most profitably be done , for these are complex psychological phenomena about which we have little certainty .
27 In fact , we have little solid evidence of the effects of earlier waves of unemployment on old people .
28 We have little evidence from research as to how the members of such households view the changing balance of the relationship .
29 We have little idea of how well other old people cope without the help of the formal sector , though it is not unreasonable to suppose that many struggle in a considerable degree of discomfort and risk .
30 However , most of the time we have little or no idea what action results from articles in the Journal , or whether members would prefer other ways of getting involved .
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