Example sentences of "[adj] [pron] have have [art] [noun sg] " in BNC.

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1 I recently lost three stone in weight and wondered how else I could improve myself and I was lucky in that I had had a mastectomy for a cancer about seven years ago , so I went ahead and had breast reconstruction .
2 I 'm afraid I 've had no exercise cos I have n't walked to the shops .
3 But , in fact , it is conscious discrimination by policy makers against the unemployed which has had the side effect of making the relative position of pensioners look artificially advantageous .
4 ‘ I 'm afraid she 's had an accident , ’ he went on .
5 ‘ Mr Dexter , I 'm afraid we 've had a bit of a problem out here … ’
6 Since 1801 it has had the right to claim a free copy of all British and Irish publications under the relevant Copyright Acts .
7 ‘ I 'm afraid he 's had a disappointment . ’
8 had n't real we 've had the frost of we have
9 John Hill says he started racing with a ski boat and then when the engines got bigger he had to have a go at powerboating which he really enjoys …
10 A and I think , I mean that has , that itself has had an effect on the , on the , on the f on peoples ' feelings for this area .
11 Of course she was glad she 'd had the opportunity to savour this experience , but it was also curiously frightening , because it was stirring something deep inside her that she had n't realised existed .
12 As a woman going onstage you have to have a degree of responsibility . ’
13 Now you er in brief we 've had a description .
14 According to his own testimony , when he was Chef de Cuisine at the Petit Moulin Rouge restaurant in the Champs Elysées in the mid 1870s he had had the idea of preserving tomatoes in such a way that they would replace fresh ones at any season .
15 It 's a six and two threes we 've had a number of times .
16 Yeah London that one 's had a bomb in it .
17 And I 'm sure you 've had a bit of thought about it , I 'm glad you 're see it there er and the whole lot is a blessed mismatch , it 's nothing to do with us though I do thank you Mr for the help you wish to give me , the Duke of Westminster and the Duke of Rutland if this goes through as I said this today because without a doubt the government will listen to what you have to say and I 've no doubt it will be effect .
18 So make sure you 've had a decision on your claim before you buy .
19 I 'm sure you have had the time , what you do n't do is make the time because
20 Is she aware that the Feltham visitors ' report , which I am sure she has had a chance to read , said that there were only 24 workshop training places for 256 young people ?
21 It was the babies you see that they were Well you had to have the doctor to you .
22 Gould was charmed by these little parrots whose ‘ extreme cheerfulness of disposition and sprightliness of manner ’ he said ‘ render it an especial favourite with all who have had an opportunity of seeing it alive ’ .
23 I 'd been so busy I 'd had no time to think .
24 There was no significant difference in the response to HRT between patients with ulcerative colitis and Crohn 's disease , smokers and non-smokers , and those who had had a hysterectomy and those who had not .
25 These include : children under 16 , students under 19 in full time education , women aged 60 and over , men aged 65 and over , expectant mothers and those who have had a child within the past 12 months , whose on income support or family income supplement , war service pensioners and those suffering from a range of specified complaints .
26 Stopping smoking is the most effective single treatment for those who have had a heart attack or have developed arterial disease of the legs .
27 " Those who have had the advantage of experience in such matters " , wrote Austen Layard , a contemporary of Wallace who had discovered the ancient city of Nineveh , " know that one of the results of fever is a considerable excitement of the brain , consequent audacity and no small additional loquacity only limited by physical debility . "
28 An ancient aphorism , ‘ Energy Follows Thought ’ , is most applicable to the understanding of the problem as well as the nature of those who have had the misfortune to suffer its terrible consequences .
29 He insisted : ‘ As far as we are concerned we have had no approach from anyone about Davies and we do not wish him to move elsewhere . ’
30 In this century alone we have had a succession of such images , from the stately , big-busted , Edwardian beauty , through the languid and willowy pre-Raphaelite heroine , the boyish 1920s ‘ flapper ’ , the sleekly groomed , wide-shouldered 1940s woman of the world , to the innocent , long-haired nymph of the 1960s and the colourful gypsy of the 1970s .
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