Example sentences of "[coord] [adv] [pers pn] have [adj] [noun] " in BNC.

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1 Marie keeps cornflakes and stuff in the room , and if there 's any milk we have that , or else we have some toast and jam .
2 If I see anything on the subject it goes into the file , and eventually I have enough material for a book or an article . ’
3 I think the proof of the pudding was that y you know you finished up in twelve minutes and arguably you have three minutes could have been spent floating around just chatting about this , that and the other .
4 Each action was a cause of the stopping , then , and so we have two causes .
5 The average pension for farmers is 50 ecu ( £36 ) per month , and so we have huge problems .
6 Such women ( I include myself ) are probably a majority in the movement ( it was the sort of feeling that brought us into it in the first place , and anyway we have more time than mothers ) but not among women as a whole , most of whom appear to want to spend at least part of their lives having and raising children .
7 Childbearing makes women dependent and thus they have less access to such freedom .
8 First we had Rocks , then we had new Rocks and now we have Super Rocks .
9 And now we have fanatical variations of the Muslim faith breathin' hate and venom all over the Near East . ’
10 And now they have mental powers that allow them to surpass physical laws . ’
11 And now they have another LP .
12 ‘ I am so certain of my place here that I would have resigned anyway , and now I have good reason three times over … my nerve had already failed twice , and could n't do so again … . ’
13 And now I have some news for you .
14 Now I suppose for most of us because of the very fact were here this morning they have been few and far between such experiences , perhaps what is more common is that we may have spent time with someone who was dying , their last few hours , their last few minutes , and if they were not unconscious I wonder what sort of conversation would be going on between us and them , what sort of things would we , would we of been saying , what would we be asking us , well in this passage that we have been reading we have just such a conversation , two men who are on the verge of death , death can only be hours away for both of them , and here they have this conversation , it was in that sense it was one of the strangest interviews any body ever had with Jesus not only is the , the account here of er a death bed conversion , but the one who is saving is also in the process of dying .
15 Death , it can only be hours away for both of them and here they have this conversation .
16 Once you have chosen , ordered and taken delivery of your kit garage , all that remains is to put it together , and here you have several options .
17 Mr Park told him ‘ that his authority extended beyond Wolverton to Crewe also ; and then we have repairing sheds at Carlisle and Willesden . ’
18 I mean what a good idea you have a week off away from all the kids and then you have another couple days and call them training days .
19 You can get them with long pins each si have them standing up the board and then you have another board , a board with a so you can
20 If your living with your in-laws and you 're having a baby and you want a house or if you have a baby and then you have another baby and you 're still living with your in-laws housing need has n't changed it just grows .
21 She said and then I have two weeks erm homework to mark and then we have a weeks holiday I thought well that 's two weeks
22 I will leave them behind me and go only with the clothes on my back , and then I have two miles and a half and a byway to the town , and bring pretty well dressed I may come to some harm almost as bad as what I ran away from , and then , perhaps , it will be reported I have stolen something , and to carry a bad name to my dear parents …
23 It is a point of view for which now and then I have some sympathy .
24 No , I thought that perhaps a stroll down Unter den Linden — such memories for me there — and then I have another idea .
25 First of all the major documentation we 've got is the contract and there we have six companies and we have the same contract for all six .
26 ‘ The poll tax is almost finished and yet you have Labour councillors still hounding working class people .
27 The main distinction I think you will find when you tour round Greater York is is that the distinction is between areas of intensive agriculture where of course you have the w which is to the west and to the south of the city , where you in fact have the highest quality of agricultural land , and the areas to the north where you have the lower quality agricultural land and therefore you have greater retention of cover .
28 They did n't go into details , but apparently they have medical records from their own GP and a letter from their local hospital . ’
29 I think I 'd like to start by making a few general points , er and then er it will be a matter for for others to be somewhat more specific , I I I think I can say that the issue of a new settlement of a new settlement in Greater York is is a fairly unique situation , because we have agreement between the development industry and the County Council , and that 's something of a rarity , but also we have mild support from the Department of the Environment , and as Mr Davis has already said , that is backed by public support .
30 And on the front page they say : ‘ We did n't want to share our sorrow but now we have good news to tell . ’
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