Example sentences of "[modal v] have [art] whole " in BNC.

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1 Furthermore , we keep hearing about other conferences being planned in Paris and in Hannover , Panofsky 's home town , and then we heard there has been a proposal that the International Congress of the History of Art in Berlin ( 15–20 July ) should have a whole section devoted to Panofsky , ( although there has been some disagreement about this recently ) .
2 Must have the whole army nearly !
3 ‘ You 'll have the whole place to yourself today .
4 You 'll have the whole school talking . ’
5 ‘ OK , we 'll have another look but do n't tell anyone else or we 'll have the whole village digging it up . ’
6 ‘ It 's between Louth and Willoughby but I 'm not saying exactly or we 'll have the whole world knowing ! ’
7 We 'll have the whole house down . "
8 ‘ Ten thousand then , Mr Holroyd , and you 'll have the whole album . ’
9 ‘ I think I 'll have the whole bloody lot of you transferred to the infantry , ’ Woolley said .
10 If they carry on this way we 'll have the whole site out
11 If yo I hope you , I suppose you could have a whole course in psycho-history , if you really put into it enough , but for just one class , I thought it was too much to ask students to attend , to try and have to get into psycho-history , so I have n't erm , done very much of it , and this , my excuse here really was , well Freud did write a book called Woodrow Wilson .
12 I mean you could have a whole new roof put on your house and it would cost about six thousand , seven thousand pounds and
13 We 'd have a whole one .
14 but we had one with eight so we 'd have we 'd have the whole thing there twice .
15 Children whose families have come from other countries may have a whole range of skills that are not normally recognised in English schools .
16 erm To what extent do you rely on measurements , as it were , and to what erm extent do you rely on actual observations , because it seems to me that there 's a , at least a possibility that you may have a whole sort of set of measurements that may indicate something 's going to happen , but if you actually stuck your head out of the window and looked up you could see it was actually raining instead of sunny ?
17 And while her eyes went wide at the importance of that statement to the literary world , ‘ It was with no small degree of relief , ’ he continued , ‘ that I personally took my work to my publishers in Prague and , that done , resolved that apart from day-to-day correspondence I would have a whole month off — perhaps longer — and free my mind of anything connected with work .
18 By providing fast links between car parks , residential , office and shopping centres , real-estate planners will have a whole new range of options open to them . ’
19 In an interview with The Art Newspaper on 28 September , Christopher Davidge , managing director of Christies International , explained , ‘ by the end of the decade we will have a whole set of new clients who will not know the tradition of Christie 's and Sotheby 's as does our current base .
20 If you skate with the same passion as you preach I dare say you will have the whole parish at your feet . ’
21 You know you can have the whole family at it .
22 So you can have the whole lot for four hundred .
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