Example sentences of "[modal v] have [verb] [pers pn] for a " in BNC.
Next pageNo | Sentence |
---|---|
1 | ‘ You must have done it for a good reason . |
2 | In his brown canvas boots , faded blue trousers , checked shirt and frayed cap , one might have mistaken him for a man of no consequence instead of a senior member of local government . |
3 | Some might have taken him for a mere apprentice enchanter who had run away from his master out of defiance , boredom , fear and a lingering taste for heterosexuality . |
4 | Anyone who did n't know them might have taken them for a couple of businessmen out for a Sunday afternoon stroll . |
5 | A fair crowd had gathered on the Wigmore Street-Portman Square corner and at first you could have mistaken it for a queue outside a sandwich shop , or even the Post Office just a bit further down the street . |
6 | I said well if you got us a dog I 'd have to take it for a late night walk would n't I ? |
7 | If your car seems totally unsuitable for transporting the patient , you may have to exchange it for a different model . |
8 | I said I may have to hurt him for a remark like that . |
9 | I would have done it for a young white guy if he was from my club and I realised that he did not have enough money to play the Tour . " |
10 | The playing of the BBC Symphony Orchestra under Peter Eötrös , who had given the work several times before this 1991 Prom performance , seems immensely confident and assured , all the complexities mastered ; and the recording quality is so good ( and the audience so quiet ) I would have taken it for a ‘ state-of-theart ’ studio job . |
11 | Sir James Barrie would have known him for a Lost Boy . |
12 | Maxim would have known it for a British government office no matter where in the world he met it : small neon-lit with a hodge-podge of cheap furniture and painted to look scruffy even when it was surgically dean . |