Example sentences of "[modal v] [not/n't] have [noun] [prep] [noun sg] " in BNC.

  Next page
No Sentence
1 The trader may not have expertise in accounting or buying
2 However , if it is thought that the joint tenancy might be severed ( and there might be good matrimonial or tax planning reasons for this ) it is preferable to include the enlargement of powers as in Precedent 34 for otherwise the trustees of the conveyance may not have power to mortgage or charge the property ( see Perpetuities and Accumulations Act 1964 , s8 ) .
3 Five minutes , before you start it though now that it might not apply to you , you might not have control over training , and perhaps down the left hand side you put well what methods do they use and you might put the other side then you go back and suggest to your boss will you alright .
4 Having got this joke out of the way , she was then told no she could not have money for food , but she could have cash for a carpet .
5 It may order that the decision shall not have effect pending appeal or that the care or supervision order shall remain in force for the appeal period but subject to the court 's directions ( s40(3) ) .
6 Candidates shall not have access to examination scripts .
7 We 're talking here of protection , of they ca n't have waiver of premium because of ill-health , they 're not going to be able to have living assurance , so it , it 's not an option really for them to have one without the other , because it 's an automatic protection that , that really should be the basis of somebody 's package of their health commitment to have it .
8 We ca n't have Secretaries of State behaving in this way and talking about respected professionals in such disparaging terms
9 They will not have worries over money , housing and difficulties with an ex-partner over the children .
10 Wo n't have time to appetite .
11 ‘ I 'm only spoiling you like this , ’ lied my mother , ‘ because when you 've got a home of your own you wo n't have time for breakfast in bed . ’
12 And again there is a suggestion put forward to support this theory that local people wo n't have access to housing , and the suggestion is that ou that migrants have the ability to outbid locals .
13 Talk about ‘ forging a new language ’ to describe new experiences forgets that an old language can sometimes express novelty better than any other ; and the case fails to notice , too , that life depends on contrasts : that you can not have informality without formality , bluntness without courtesy , indecorum without decorum .
14 With the usual kindly swat , and again directing his intellectual energy towards moral concerns , Johnson replies , ‘ No sir , he can not have pleasure in music , at least no power of producing music ; for he who can produce music may let it alone ; he who can play upon a fiddle may break it : such a man is not a machine . ’
  Next page