Example sentences of "[pron] [adv] have have a [noun sg] " in BNC.

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1 I once had to have a leg replaced when a couple of Hunters tore mine off .
2 I rudely announced to my wife Claudia that I simply had to have a baby by the time I was 35 .
3 I simply had to have a break .
4 I then had to have a hysterectomy .
5 Says 15-year-old David Stokes : ‘ There are quite a few boys who just have to have a girlfriend , but it 's not what we all feel .
6 But you see you still have to have a person there while we 're
7 So you really have to have a sort of strong character and in you go .
8 She too had had a call this day , and finally had told Mr Blaney in the shop that she was going , that she was unwell , could not go on .
9 This woman was 37 years old , and she too had had a lumpectomy and radiotherapy four years earlier .
10 We could of , we , could we not have had a statement that er er er erm a certificate of conformity could be issued or will be issued ?
11 And he always had a pot of linseed and black Spanish , and we always had to have a drink of this , cos he thought it was fantastic .
12 ‘ I would hate it to go down in Conservative mythology that we always had to have a gaggle of young men running every campaign , ’ he said , ‘ although if we had the same bunch at the next election at least they 'd be a few years older . ’
13 Yes , it 's , it 's possibly worth mentioning on that as well that , in comparison with the supply based , I mean the existing system is demand based , which is silly , because we have to have fire stations there even if they never go out , if they go out twice a year , we still have to have a fire station in loco , but with the demand based model that 's illustrated in A C C based initiative , it 's based on existing supply , and this authority has a fairly frugal level of supply in comparison with some other authorities , so what happens is that if you apply it to existing supply then we come out quite badly .
14 He still had to have a medical .
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