Example sentences of "[noun] [adv] [verb] to have a [noun] " in BNC.

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1 Like the RYR , therefore , the IP 3 R also seems to have a CICR mechanism which is of fundamental importance for understanding of how cells generate calcium oscillations and waves .
2 Sat for ages tonight trying to have a vision but nothing happened .
3 The group now claims to have a 50% share of the US car manuals market .
4 Some conditions already thought to have a basis in disturbances in the immune system may be more common , such as psoriasis .
5 Those old Andy Hardy movies always seemed to have a scene where a bunch of American teenagers would be sitting around in an old barn or something wondering where to stage their amateur dramatics .
6 The King hardly needed to have a net laid for him , but had he done so it would have been difficult to assemble , almost in his own backyard , a more obvious team of trappers .
7 The powers-that-be at the BBC really need to have a rethink .
8 ‘ The banana nose and attachment glasses line have n't gone too well , ’ sighed Neville in rare serious moment , but the new range of masks are going well at £39 a time it 's clear people still want to have a laugh .
9 Billy also decided to have a beer .
10 The old African prohibition of multiplying sites of popular devotion to legions of homemade martyrs was turned inside out : every altar now had to have a martyr 's relic beneath it .
11 Some actors just seem to have a knack for making themselves unpopular .
12 Cranston always seemed to have a fear of small boys .
13 For the first time since leaving the Harvard Business School of Management Klepner now began to have a glimmer of understanding of the many important practical differences between Europe and the United States .
14 When other horses are reaching their limit , Milton always seems to have a bit more in reserve . ’
15 I doubt if my mother really wanted to have a child in the heat of India and was surely delighted that she was merely the victim of indigestion .
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