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

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1 Differences occurred as to means , but examination of the electoral manifestos throughout the 1960s and 1970s shows a reluctance to politicize issues which , given the intractable nature of crime and the limited efficacy of measures to counter it , would only have had the effect of exciting popular expectations beyond the capacity of any government to fulfil .
2 then the other one still has to have the equivalent of a C commanding although it 's in a , in a different way .
3 Mr Healey said that Labour , always having had a majority of men , would have won every election since 1922 if women had n't been given the vote .
4 Jo always had had the gift of the gab , she could make a stone laugh doing her imitation of Mr Silver trying to get her up behind the cloakroom door .
5 And he always had a pot of linseed and black Spanish , and we always had to have a drink of this , cos he thought it was fantastic .
6 ‘ I would hate it to go down in Conservative mythology that we always had to have a gaggle of young men running every campaign , ’ he said , ‘ although if we had the same bunch at the next election at least they 'd be a few years older . ’
7 While Connors became a protege of Segura 's at sixteen years old , Jimmy also had had the benefit of coming from a strong tennis family .
8 But she would rather have had a handful of honest reviews .
9 I 'd rather have have a cup of tea
10 The project that has gone quite far has had every chance of success but has failed and therefore has demonstrated its inadequacy .
11 So you really have to have a sort of strong character and in you go .
12 The difficulties of operating the system led to its failure , however , and proposals which bridge Chemistry and Biology , say , now have to have the approval of review bodies in both disciplines .
13 However , the positive attitudes of Rastafarians towards Creole — in contrast to the negative attitudes of the Caribbean establishment , the majority of older generation Caribbeans in Britain , and the white British establishment — may well have had the effect of promoting the use of Creole among black ( and to some extent , white ) youth .
14 The next mill downstream has had a variety of names over the years : Russell Mill , Lowes Mill and more recently , Malvern Mill .
15 The breathless warning she would have uttered earlier would at least have had the ring of sincerity , but now she was only too conscious of having to play a part .
16 A man called Slade made a statement that he had seen Cooper twice in London on the day of the murder , indeed had had a cup of tea with him in a café .
17 Ah doubt there 's anybody else has had the sort of opportunity he 's had for flyin' around at will in that part of the Antarctic . ’
18 The particular provisions of the Planning and Compensation Act 1991 in the consideration of which my hon. Friend played such a distinguished part do not come into force until next month , so directors of planning will not yet have had the benefit of the provisions .
19 Since the Second World War , swings Left and Right have had a knack of coinciding on both sides of the Atlantic , with Wilson riding on the post-Kennedy-Johnson wave , Callaghan coming back with Carter , and Margaret Thatcher heralding the Reaganite counter-revolution .
20 She would never have had the kind of success she 's had , with Broadway and so on , if she 'd stayed at home in England waiting to be asked .
21 They would certainly have had no chance of financing their programme without large increases both in taxation and in the borrowing requirement .
22 Incompatible therefore though a Co-operative sector would be with the Webbs ' version of the fully Socialist economy , the incompatibility has not so far become obtrusive in the United Kingdom because Labour Governments , which incidentally have had the support of the Co-operative Party as the political arm of the Co-operative Consumer Movement , have carried western Socialist Empiricism to the point of settling for the mixed economy ; and any central planning has been indicative — and , some would say , ineffectual — rather than mandatory .
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