Example sentences of "[noun] have [to-vb] [prep] [pron] [det] " in BNC.
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1 | And it was the thought of all the children who , like Danny might have experimented not knowing that they were dicing with death , that prompted David to try to stop any more parents having to go through his own agony . |
2 | If we want to save the fish in the sea , the trees in the rain forests and the ozone layer , the wealthy countries have to look to their own consumption habits . |
3 | ‘ Nowadays , the young ambassadors have to pay for their own trips , but to ensure there is a true cross-section of American society takes part many of them are sponsored . ’ |
4 | They buy from it and the design group has to look after its own destiny and its own profitability . |
5 | Always remember that fish have to swim in their own ‘ loo ’ . |
6 | The whole point and purpose of authorities , I shall argue below , is to pre-empt individual judgment on the merits of a case , and this will not be achieved if , in order to establish whether the authoritative determination is binding , individuals have to rely on their own judgment of the merits . |
7 | Just a merest glimpse at the trade papers reveals the extent to which from the start the movies had to fight against their own impulses and their own logic . |
8 | But what would Fernando have to say about it all ? |
9 | ‘ Fishermen from all over the Community have been arguing the same case — that the commission has to look after its own — and the council of ministers has singularly failed to do so . ’ |
10 | Members of Mongolia 's approximately 300 rural co-operatives had to decide on their own approach to privatization . |
11 | And what did the photographers have to say about it all ? |
12 | I think in the long view it is all to the good that the government have to look after their own chickens as they come home to roost , and get a lot of the dirt cleared before we come in . |
13 | As soon as he got to Aix he wrote to Chamberlain : ‘ I think in the long view it is all to the good that the Government have to look after their own chickens as they come home to roost , and get a lot of the dirt cleared up before we come in . ’ |
14 | As a result , she adds , teachers have to pay towards their own training because the Ministry can not provide materials and documents . |
15 | If , as is all too common , Scots lawyers have to apply in their own system a document imperfectly adapted to their own familiar terms , such as is the RICS scale in this particular , it may be of some advantage to know what ‘ rent reserved ’ means , at least in the country in which it originated . |
16 | Each science has to do with its own genus , or ‘ kind ’ , which is divided by ‘ differentia ’ into various species . |
17 | A secretary or executive has to plough through them all to fulfil every media request . |
18 | However , there are more than 50 million people in this country , and HMG has to look after them all . |
19 | You ca n't use extra national insurance contributions in one year to make up a shortfall in another ; each year has to stand on its own . |
20 | Toraja warriors had to die in their own " Rante " , or village circle , if their souls were successfully to return to the stars . |
21 | They can begin again to focus on another person outside themselves , and relate what others have to say to their own situation . |
22 | But Mr Taylor said : ‘ The PFA have to look after their own affairs and we already have Professor Sir John Wood in that very role . |
23 | The result is that Dublin has to stand on its own constant , as well as temporary , merits . |
24 | Dr Upshall said the other main parties gained funds from corporate finance but the Green Party had to rely on its own fund raising . |