Example sentences of "[pers pn] [adv] have [verb] for [art] " in BNC.

  Next page
No Sentence
1 It worked rather well , and I made far more by doing that than I ever had working for the paper shop .
2 I always have to prepare for the day 's lessons , If I want everything to go smoothly , ’ she explains .
3 In these cases I either have to wait for a passing walker and ask for assistance , try to reverse my direction or take the plunge and risk damage to chair and body .
4 ( Of course , for my friends to stand a chance of receiving any correspondence from me means that I either have to wait for the guilt level to rise sufficiently ( which is a slow process ) , or to unearth other things to put on my list like ‘ Install central heating ’ and ‘ Decorate bathroom ’ . )
5 ‘ Then she burst into tears — as she always has done for the four years I 've known her ’
6 Then she burst into tears — as she always has done for the four years I 've known her .
7 To get anywhere near an understanding of News Corporation 's accounts , you usually have to wait for the figures it is obliged to file with America 's Securities and Exchange Commission .
8 You also have to watch for the sudden windfalls — like the R.P.I. Index monies this year .
9 Jenny did not reappear and Sara began to think that she really had gone for a walk .
10 We just had to look for the Motor Caravan Construction Code symbol .
11 Whatever the vertical and lateral changes in the Coal Measures , we still have to account for a general facies development in late Carboniferous times that extends in essentially the same form all the way from Texas to the Donetz coal basin , north of the Caspian Sea in the U.S.S.R. This amounts to some 170 of longitude , and closing up the Atlantic by a mere 40 does not really help all that much in explaining this remarkable phenomenon .
12 And we also have paid for the reconnection fee .
13 It is as though Lawrence was acknowledging that it is hard for human beings to say what they feel and that we often have to search for the form of words before we can find the words themselves .
14 Yet morale in the European shops was never as high as in their UK counterparts and they often had to beg for a booster visit from their patrons .
15 The landlords of this period often had a bond of sympathy with their tenants in that they too had to struggle for a living , and that their living conditions , especially in the tenth and early eleventh centuries , were not widely different .
16 When I complained , the company said there was a clause on the processing envelope that said if anything went wrong , it only had to pay for the film .
17 Meredith was surprised he always had to look for a hidden motive .
  Next page