Example sentences of "[adv] [adv] [verb] have [art] [noun] " in BNC.

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1 He seems to have known enough about ordinary medicine — and perhaps still have had the contacts within the profession — to make sure that I got my inoculations and injections at the correct times in my life , despite my official non-existence as far as the National Health Service is concerned .
2 Q I have been trying to locate a manufacturer of a walking boot or walking shoe which is synthetic , ie not leather or suede for a vegetarian friend , but so far have had no luck .
3 In addition to the question of impact , the qualitative research so far described has the disadvantage — in many people 's eyes — of not being on a large enough scale .
4 Harthacnut was thus evidently thought to have a claim , which his housecarls ( if they were not simply inherited from his father ) were perhaps in England to safeguard .
5 The dramatic events of the last few days might have been more easily understood had the Georgians been playing Milan or Manchester United .
6 While Mr Fallon will probably not have had the chance to read the report , we think it unwise for him to dismiss it out of hand .
7 Elucidating Point Three was probably going to have the effect of encouraging the tsar to continue the war , for if Point Three meant promoting British interests , it was probably also going to have the effect of inclining Austria not to enter the lists .
8 Given the choice , she 'd really rather have had an assignment in Outer Mongolia or possibly Timbuktu — maybe by putting a few thousand miles between herself and Dane she 'd manage to get him out of her mind .
9 He is going to do that , so he was going to have a hand in that he 's gon not really not going to have a hand in it , he is going to be directly responsible for selecting the panel which will select the independent members on the short list and recommend them to him .
10 The law of criminal libel is an unnecessary relic of the past which is now generally agreed to have no place in modern jurisprudence .
11 If you look at the industry as a whole , there 's obviously the problem that by producing so much more content that people are are simply not going to have the time to get through it .
12 It would have suited his purposes admirably well to have had the police arrest them for responding to his antagonism .
13 The project that has gone quite far has had every chance of success but has failed and therefore has demonstrated its inadequacy .
14 " Shoes would almost certainly have had a maker 's name on them , and such names on shoes are generally stamped in the leather and not easy to take out .
15 Since the mid-1960s , the post-war consensus politics of British society have virtually been abandoned : trade unions can no longer presume to have a partnership role and have increasingly been perceived as problematic to the national interest .
16 As we have seen , a public company is no longer permitted to have a charge or lien on its shares except ( a ) when the shares are not fully paid and the charge or lien is for the amount payable on the shares , or ( b ) the ordinary business of the company includes the lending of money or consists of the provision of hire-purchase finance and the charge arises in the course of a transaction in the ordinary course of its business .
17 On a more technical note , since August 1990 pension schemes which are in surplus over the Inland Revenue limit ( 5 per cent ) are no longer allowed to have the money returned to the company unless pension scheme members are first guaranteed certain benefits , namely : pension increases of either 5 per cent a year or the rate of inflation — whichever is lower .
18 Er Mr also made the point that er urban regeneration erm no longer seems to have the emphasis that it did have .
19 ‘ I would very much like to have a meeting with you in the New Year , Stephen .
20 The only good news I can tell you is that I would very much like to have the opportunity .
21 I think from my own personal preference I would very much like to have an understanding of what happens at the interface between solids and liquids , because this affects so many different branches of chemistry and physics _ the understanding of what happens at interfaces will govern the understanding of what makes things stick together , what makes catalysis occur , the nature of rocks even .
22 Yeah he said , but the girl that was with him said that you were very highly honoured to have a letter that length cos usually she gets dear oh I her name 's what her but dear whoever , got loads to tell you , love Mario .
23 ‘ We 've never really tried to have a proposition , ’ says Abbott .
24 But , ’ he added wryly , ‘ I have it in mind that so he is , and may very well have had the hardihood to play it so . ’
25 Ah 'm bloody well goin' to have a look at Chanchán . ’
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