Example sentences of "[vb mod] have [verb] [noun] [art] [adj] " in BNC.

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1 Many people thought we should have beaten England the last time .
2 There was every reason , apart from the unexpectedness of the news , why this should have given Eliot the greatest distress .
3 He must have given Marius an electric shock , or injected air into his veins , or — ’
4 For the Latin that the adult Charles read , and presumably wrote , so fluently , he must have owed Walahfrid a large debt .
5 I could n't help but imagine the scene of panic and desperation that must have taken place a few hours earlier - the young dolphin fighting and dying in a few frantic spasms , its grieving mother well able to defend her child from sharks but helpless against a silent , resisting wall of nylon . ’
6 He must have changed ponies an awful lot .
7 During the Penal Times , Catholics must have thought spires a Protestant invention .
8 The Nottingham Forest manager admitted recently his run-ins with the FA might have cost Nigel a regular international place .
9 It was this impression that might have cost Labour the marginal seats — especially in London and the South — it needed to make the breakthrough .
10 And so the point I 'm making is that , is that a modern insight into Darwinian evolution is based on a wholly scientific basis and social Darwinism may have got Darwinism a bad name by associating it with slogans like survival of the fittest , but modern Darwinism er is n't like that .
11 ‘ If the plane had crashed everyone would have called Glenn a tragic hero for his efforts .
12 He would have given Archie a hard time , I 'm sure of it .
13 These and other strange animals would have given Olduvai a unique ambience , but the basic framework of the present-day savannah environment had already been established .
14 Mark Hateley , who squandered an opportunity in the final minute two weeks ago which would have given Rangers a 3–1 lead , made dramatic amends .
15 Charles Innes , an experienced lawyer who advised Lord Dundas in political matters , had no doubt about the desirability of acting to meet Glassford 's wishes , pointing out that Carrick had not been dismissed for malversation , which would have made reinstatement a difficult matter , but for ‘ some piece of neglect or inattention ’ , and in fact another of Dundas 's correspondents appeared to get closer to the heart of the difficulty when he met with Glassford , reporting that
16 Had times been normal we are sure that Mr Crawford would have made Otago the foremost province in the Dominion . ’
17 The degree and meaning of prostitution was an important issue in itself ( one estimate would have made prostitution the fourth largest female occupation ) but more important , given the double standard , was the reservoir of venereal disease especially syphilis , that it was perceived as constituting , a threat particularly to the efficiency of the armed services , and it was concern over this that led to the passing of the Contagious Diseases Acts ( in 1864 , 1866 , 1869 ) .
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