Example sentences of "have [verb] the full " in BNC.

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1 Noades has revealed the full extent of fury from Selhurst Park supporters at what they perceived as his personal attack on Coppell .
2 For if a garage habitually does half the service its costs are very much lower than if it has done the full service ; and since it can charge the full price , because of the ignorance of the consumer , its pro fits are maximised when it does as little of the service as it can get away with .
3 Val 's scheme has got the full backing of police in Gloucestershire and West Mercia .
4 I had no way of checking it and am grateful , therefore , that Sir Gordon Cox has provided the full version .
5 Scottish universities now take many students from the Republic of Ireland and Scotland has to pay the full tuition fees for all those students .
6 Suppose that an individual has to put up 100 per cent margin ( i.e. has to pay the full amount of the investment Pf from the start ) but that this can be invested at the riskless rate r .
7 Congress , the woman worker is often low paid , and suffers from the menopause symptom and has to pay the full prescription charges for a treatment of H R T.
8 THE PANTHER Burns came to London with a fearsome reputation — folk lucky enough to witness their two previous London shows still rave about them , and each of their four LPs has achieved the full Sounds five start treatment .
9 THE PANTHER Burns came to London with a fearsome reputation — folk lucky enough to witness their two previous London shows still rave about them , and each of their four LPs has achieved the full Sounds five start treatment .
10 In response to the recent craze for luxurious presented ( and sometimes performed ) musicals , Sony has launched the full price ‘ Sony Broadway ’ label , which features some rarer items coming up in ‘ original cast ’ recordings .
11 By the third year the phasing has overtaken the full rate so the full rate is paid .
12 And when she 'd learned the full amount of the financial sums involved Laura had n't felt too cheerful either .
13 The greater the length of time that they have had to consider the full implications of what was proposed at Maastricht , the stronger have been their reservations .
14 At $60 , anyone who has held his shares will have received the full benefit of the new information whether it is disclosed to him or not .
15 All managers are being trained up to the standards of NEBOSH , the national examining body for health and safety in the UK , and by September 300 will have completed the full NEBOSH course .
16 This does mean that Council Tax payers will have to meet the full cost of any Council water charge , less any single person discounts which may be applicable , without the benefit of rebate assistance .
17 Julie says she has been assured he wo n't have to serve the full sentence .
18 If we had had something similar before , this would have revealed the full extent of our Director 's motoring convictions .
19 Having seen the full extent of your naked charms , fair play decrees I reveal my own . ’
20 Yet in 1939 he could not have envisaged the full irony of the destiny that history had reserved for him .
21 Either schools will have to lend the bulk of their support to the organization and teaching forms which are associated with more traditional forms of assessment , or they will have to recognize the full implications of new forms of recording achievement and adjust their procedures accordingly .
22 In the preface to this saga you will have tasted the full flavour of the Ju88 attack from the account by Bob Pointer — my mid-upper gunner — and who better to describe that horrendous shock of the cannon squirt .
23 It is important to realise that if you decide to get a car without using the Motability scheme you will have to pay the full costs of adaptations .
24 If you have a break in employment for two complete consecutive tax years , for whatever reason , you must pay full-rate contributions when you return to work : so , if you leave employment in March 1988 , you can return to work at any time up to 5th April 1990 and still pay the reduced rate ; but if you wait longer than that , you will have to pay the full rate .
25 If you are going to be away from work for a period in the future , you will have to pay the full rate when you return to paid employment , so it might be as well to start now , and build up the maximum benefit .
26 ‘ She said I 'd have to pay the full amount or put it back in the freezer , ’ said Mr Parker , of York .
27 However , under a provision known as the ‘ Official Error Concession ’ , allowances are sometimes made and it is possible that you may not have to pay the full amount .
28 If you do n't qualify for a voucher you will have to pay the full cost of the glasses yourself .
29 If you have savings or capital , including the value of your house , of more than £8000 you will have to pay the full costs of the nursing or residential home .
30 rebate while the majority of pensioner couples with modest savings or occupational pensions will have to pay the full council tax ?
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