Example sentences of "[noun] [adv] have [to-vb] [art] [noun] " in BNC.
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1 | The critic necessarily has to take a manifesto into account . |
2 | The president still has to make a host of key decisions : how generous to make the benefits ; how to pay for the changes ; how much freedom to give the states and , above all , how to sell the package . |
3 | Candidates also have to choose a paper in one of these two areas : the Philosophy , Nature and Practice of Geography or the United Kingdom and France . |
4 | Dressmakers also had to meet the cost of hiring a sewing machine at 1/6d to 2/6d a week . |
5 | Games tend to be inherently object-oriented , says Hinsley ( all those sprites moving about and interacting ) and games authors often have to cram a lot into a tiny amount of memory while stretching hardware to its limits . |
6 | Games tend to be inherently object-oriented , says Hinsley ( all those sprites moving about and interacting ) and games authors often have to cram a lot into a tiny amount of memory while stretching hardware to its limits . |
7 | A well-informed horseman simply had to grasp the horse 's head firmly and give it a sharp turn and back him out of the area that had been contaminated by the jading substance . |
8 | Once the source text is understood , the translator then has to tackle the task of producing a target version which can be accepted as a text in its own right . |
9 | Subjects therefore had to obey the laws of their earthly governors , in whatever they commanded that was not contrary to divine law . |
10 | Dona never had to feel the pain , torment or be racked with guilt as Anna did . |
11 | Institutions thus have to make a judgement as to what liquidity ratio is best — one that is neither too high nor too low . |
12 | Anyway , that meant I could have a decent drink and trust to luck not to have to need a lift back . |
13 | Plans were lodged with Arfon Borough Council in April but the council still has to make a decision . |
14 | The judge also had to consider a submission made by the mother that the return of the children ( if ordered ) would expose them to a ‘ grave risk of physical or psychological harm or place them in an intolerable situation ’ within the terms of paragraph ( b ) of article 13 . |
15 | He 'd had enough of all that European political crap about overseas subsidiaries also having to represent the interests of the local host country where United Motors had a manufacturing presence . |
16 | He thought privatisation was a logical and highly motivating next step ; commenting ‘ AEA now has to win the hearts and minds of staff if privatisation is to succeed . ’ |
17 | ‘ Those countries therefore have to make the leap from the command economy to the market economy , from the single party state to pluralism . |
18 | Poor old Jim always has to make the decision because he is in command , okay ? |
19 | This recommendation was not accepted , however , and the authorities still have to balance the need to provide access to the parks with the need to preserve them from the increased pressure that results . |
20 | Instead of a windfall-profits tax , which cost them £375m in 1981 , the banks merely have to suffer the pin-prick of a delay in claiming tax-relief on those same provisions which hit their profits . |
21 | It means the teacher only has to write a word once , in the teacher 's book , instead of thirty-plus times , once in each child 's book . |
22 | To the commuter , the new red , white and blue house colours just had to represent a commitment to strive for quality . |
23 | Nevertheless , the banks still have to find the interest payable on these deposits . |
24 | WELSHMAN Nicky Piper hardly had to take a punch in beating Argentinian Miguel Maldonado to win the WBA Penta-Continental title at Manchester 's Free Trade Hall . |
25 | While I believe that some parts of this routine are absolutely essential , I am only too well aware that the ideas still have to stand the test of time . |
26 | Mrs McNeil also had to pay a quarter . |
27 | Dobson also had to pay the Queen £1,100 , which was the debt owed her by Sir Edward Denny , the previous holder . |
28 | Instead of an awarding body for the ‘ small cadet universities ’ as conceived by Robbins , the CNAA had become a ‘ permanent major degree awarding body for very large institutions … of a new kind ’ — and therefore , as Eric Robinson suggested in 1973 , the universities now had to share the apex of the educational system with the polytechnics and the CNAA . |
29 | But , in order to buy rather than rent their own homes , Britain 's nine million home buyers now have to borrow an average of £37,000 — more than twice the average income — whereas 10 years ago the average loan of £11,800 worked out at 1.7 times income . |
30 | It was often difficult to get schools to provide even basic information such as the breakdown of subject choice by sex , and members of the team frequently had to extract the information themselves from school data . |