Example sentences of "[vb infin] [to-vb] [adv prt] [prep] [adj] [noun sg] " in BNC.

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1 ‘ You do n't want to go back to Red Cottage ? ’
2 ‘ Would you like to come down to Carinish Court for a few days ? ’
3 So , with Sheringham still unfit , Cascarino will have to soldier on with inexperienced support .
4 ‘ … someone 'll have to go up to Top Piece , too , and have a go at that wall .
5 Church planting leaders may have to go back to secular employment for a time to finance the new work .
6 It says any proposal to decommission the hospital will first have to go out to public consultation .
7 For example , if you have to undertake practical work ( e.g. placement with an organization ) as part of your course , who obtains that placement and how closely does it have to fit in with academic training ?
8 In addition to all that , my constituents will have to put up with untold damage to their lives , homes , shops and other properties — both immediately and in the years to come .
9 Sincerely though I respect the wish of hon. Members on both sides of the House to ensure that their constituents can benefit from access to the channel tunnel — I have no desire to stand in the way of their efforts to make that wish come true — I urge that the interests of my constituents , who will have to put up with untold misery for an extended eight-year period , should be given closer consideration than BR has given them hitherto .
10 Well sh , does n't necessarily have to end up in general practice does she ?
11 None the less , I shall have to cut back on public expenditure , which has for years been outgrowing our capacity to pay for it .
12 I did n't want to wake up with blue lightning any more than you did .
13 Mm , like , her dad says to her why do n't you be a doctor and she , but she do n't want to , you know , she wants to be in a hospital and that , she do n't want to end up in general practice
14 like , she do n't want to end up in general practice .
15 A diminishing few of us will continue to come out of sheer love but many will not , especially the young .
16 Given the interest of Bakeman and Brown in finding early signposts to later development , it seems ironic that their sophisticated and hard-won ‘ dialogic variables ’ should fail to match up to personal intuition .
17 We are naturally disappointed that substantial catastrophe losses have come at a time when the pace of our underlying recovery is accelerating , but we are confident that the improvement in our performance is soundly based and will continue to show through as strong management action proves increasingly effective . ’
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