Example sentences of "have [verb] [art] whole " in BNC.
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31 | I 've wiped this I 'll have washed the whole floor . |
32 | Val will have had a whole day on the numbers . ’ |
33 | Enoch Powell later cited this indication of my position as a kind of pledge from which , when events turned out as they did , I should have had the whole Cabinet 's leave formally to withdraw . |
34 | I always knew I was adopted , so why could n't I have had the whole truth ? |
35 | Merrill could have sold the whole issue several times over in the US , but Waste Management International intends to acquire British companies , funded by future share issues , and needs to create a shareholder base in Britain to facilitate this . |
36 | They 'll not be as lively as they ought to be come morning , but tonight will have got a whole lot of unhappy things out of Seb 's system . |
37 | but you ca n't you ca n't dip into modules of that can you do n't you have to do the whole thing ? |
38 | I should have stayed the whole night in your bed , with you in my arms . |
39 | ‘ But the political reality is that we will have to reshape the whole proposal . ’ |
40 | As McLeish had observed to a colleague at the ti me , he 'd have understood the whole performance if the solicitor in question had been going to marry either of them , but there had been no question of that , it was just obfuscation for its own sake . |
41 | If I had n't been so besotted and obsessed to the point of madness I 'd have called the whole thing off ! ’ |
42 | ‘ Any one person could have brought the whole thing to an end on the spot . ’ |
43 | ‘ Yes , she knew , but she wanted things hushed up , so when Mam said she was marrying Henry she did n't protest over much , because Mam was in such a state then she would have brought the whole thing to light . |
44 | Knowing Esther , she would have executed the whole devious scheme with the utmost care . |
45 | This proposal would have involved a different , immensely complicated , and , for suspects , terrifying new caution which could easily fatally have undermined the whole rule . |
46 | The manners which Topaz had been taught at the convent were good enough as a basis for acceptable behaviour , but she soon discovered that she had a great deal more to learn , and would also have to adopt a whole new set of values . |
47 | If this is not possible you may have to forget the whole report unless your client will accept that you have read it , or a separate part of it , and they can not . |
48 | Had Red Reg turned up here , one felt certain they would have set the whole menagerie on him . |
49 | The Foreign Secretary , Douglas Hurd , held a key role during Britain 's presidency of the EC and could have set the whole tone of the West 's approach to the problem . |
50 | Her husband would have spent the whole day cooking for the steady stream of customers in the small , steamy back kitchen below and she felt that he needed a break . |
51 | While some infants may go uncomplaining through the night without feeding by the age of two months they will not have spent the whole time asleep . |
52 | Well I could have spent the whole week . |
53 | Oh I could have spent the whole week , I just , I just , I could of spent five afternoons in Ipswich , would of done or Norwich |
54 | These plants contain only minimal amounts of the chemical — tetrahydro-cannabinol — which can make users high when smoked — so to get any kind of effect — you 'd have to smoke the whole field . |
55 | Whatever the truth of who it is on the tape , this chap could easily have monitored the whole conversation over 23 minutes . ’ |
56 | It was a story that must have touched the whole nation 's hearts . |
57 | Er if it had gone over would have thrown the whole lot out of er out of gear . |
58 | You see with these signs and symptoms remember you do n't have to have the whole lot a couple of them will give you an idea that this person is concussed . |
59 | At the time of his arrival , the prohibitions of lay investiture and clerical homage must have been fresh in Anselm 's mind , and it is unimaginable that he should not have discussed the whole question with one of the main agents of the new policy . |
60 | This would have excluded the whole ecclesiastical section of landholding society from the ordinary complex of feudal relationships , and in doing this , it would have threatened the cohesion of a kingdom in a way that no earlier reforming decree had done . |