Example sentences of "[pers pn] had have [art] [adj] [noun] " in BNC.

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1 Ken said , ‘ I had to have a new banjo .
2 I had decided that I had to have a partial confidant at the school .
3 My toes went gangrenous and I had to have an arterial bypass .
4 Although I had had a substantial measure of success , it was a back-breaking activity : it involved the pouring of oceans of hypocritical praise on the undeserving ; attributing powers of discernment and discrimination to the ignorant and myopic ; and only occasionally striking gold in the form of sufficient understanding to make the toil of persuasion unnecessary .
5 My personal life had been a disaster : I had had a lousy relationship with my mother ; been frightened of my father ; from time to time my marriage had been close to the rocks and I had been an uncaring father .
6 My letter was published in full , and I was pleased with myself , for two good reasons : my first literary effort had been accepted ; and I had had a good swipe at the evils of fascism , judging by the stream of supporting letters which followed .
7 For some years I had had a similar experience in the teaching of literature , amazed to see colleagues attempting to hound students , in the context of a two- or three-year course , through complex texts in a single session : today we read King Lear , tomorrow we discuss it , and next day you write your essays on it .
8 In my grandmother 's house I had had a big bedroom ; here I had to share .
9 Over the years , in my role as home tutor to his mother , I had had a privileged relationship with Balbinder and his family .
10 I could see the room beginning to spin as though I had had a dreadful shock or a moment of unbearable fear .
11 I had had a sudden image of Syl bringing me breakfast in a bed which we had shared , and I heard myself saying aloud , ‘ No ! ’
12 I had had a whole afternoon spent upon me , been the centre of attention , cost the State a fortune and my wife had given up a whole day of precious work to be with me .
13 From the mid-sixties I had had a homosexual identity and I did say to people that I was homosexual ; but in the early seventies that had a completely different meaning .
14 I considered I had had a sheltered upbringing — perhaps ‘ genteel ’ is nearer the mark — but she came from the world of country weekends , day and night nurseries , nannies , and never having to worry about where next week 's housekeeping money was coming from , or having to do the washing up .
15 This remark , occurring as it does in a passage in which he is distinguishing between the grounds of the class metal ( ‘ the possession of certain common peculiarities ’ ) and those of the class sensation of white ( ‘ nothing but resemblance ’ ) clearly implies that if I had had no other sensations of white I could not assert the proposition ‘ This is a sensation of white ’ with the meaning it has when I have had such sensations .
16 At that stage in my life , I had had no real careers guidance and had very little idea of what I wanted to do or what I was capable of .
17 Until that moment Aunt Louise had seemed almost a stranger , her mannerisms and glances unfamiliar , and I had had no real feeling of kinship .
18 Immediately I was instructed that I had had the good fortune to be posted to ‘ the division where real polising is done … ’
19 Twenty four hours before admission she had had a transitional mole removed from her back under local anaesthesia in the outpatient department .
20 She had had a long treatment session , and then decided , possibly over-ambitiously , to visit her brother for tea , walking part of the way .
21 She had had a good time in her twenties : a good job as a doctor 's receptionist ( she had gone against the general rule for the species by being warm and sympathetic , though she stood no more nonsense than was inescapable ) .
22 She had had a gruelling day on top of a gruelling six months .
23 True , she had had a pleasant bed-sitting room , and Mrs White had cooked for her and always been welcoming , but on some cold summer evenings , sitting in her Lloyd Loom armchair by a gas fire , turned low for reasons of economy , Agnes had experienced some bleakness .
24 She had had a criminal abortion somewhere .
25 They had said at the school she had had a screaming session .
26 At eighteen — the period of the mousseline de soie dress — she had found herself hanging around a certain area of Twickenham , where they were then living , in the hopes of encountering the doctor 's son , with whom she had had a strangled conversation at some social gathering .
27 She gave this powerful sense of her character 's emotional repression , and the sense was there that she had had a hard life .
28 What if she had had a threatening letter which worried her enough to make her turn to pills ? ’
29 Anyone acting out of character worried her in this way , until she had had a silent time alone , to work it out and grow used to the change .
30 All her life she had had a clear vision of who she was and where she was going .
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