Example sentences of "[subord] [pron] [verb] have [prep] [adj] " in BNC.

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1 I thought that the thought of , er , the thoughts gone into your erm plans and your presentation was much greater than we 've had on previous courses .
2 It 's more than we 've had in recent years , judging by the general
3 ‘ We 've got more snow up here and all over the Swiss Alps than we have had in 50 years , ’ said Dr Othmar Buser , whose research centre is perched at 2,660m on the Weissfluhjoch above Davos .
4 Both Baptists and Wesleyan Methodists actually had fewer churches in 1901 than they had had in 1870 .
5 Fire Officer , paper F , and I think you 've had a something additional put on your table because you 've had with that paper A.
6 But she had never had confirmation of his death , as she had had of those of his parents and hers .
7 We had some very , very moving speeches yesterday , as we had had at previous meetings , which made it quite clear that a few pounds were vital and crucial to people 's lives , so we thought it was a a gesture that was worth making , and I have to say that probably our group also includes people on , as members , as Councillors , who are themselves on income support , so it was a move which was n't without it 's personal difficulties for us either .
8 Now that is not as significant an increase as we 've had in previous years .
9 This is the worst summer as we 've had in these parts for a century , they do say . ’
10 No longer would youth and its culture have such a power to affect society as it had had for those brief few years from 1963 to 1967 : although the sharp end of youth culture was confusing purchasing power with political power and demanding change , many of its constituents were caught by the freeze that , introduced the previous year , signified the end of the ten-year boom that had thrust youth into prominence .
11 In 1933 roughly 4,000 banks shut their doors , and the United States was left with only half as many as it had had in 1929 .
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