Example sentences of "have [verb] [prep] [adv] [prep] the " in BNC.
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1 | Molly 's uncle , Philip , Lord Noel-Baker , one of our Vice-Presidents recently celebrated his 90th birthday and it gives us great pleasure to add our greetings to the many he has received from all over the world . |
2 | A notable quantity ( one hundred ) , particularly from the 1950s onwards , derive from private collections , which may reflect the uncanonical position the later part of Picasso 's career has occupied until recently in the official estimation of his work . |
3 | As we noted in Fig. 15.2 and Table 15.2 , the ratio has risen since then under the influence of recessionary conditions . |
4 | Ben Hall has spoken of how in the 1920s the United States ‘ was dotted with a thousand Xanadus ’ , luxurious cinemas in which people all too concerned with their own improvement could satisfy their curiosity about how other people had succeeded . |
5 | Erm in my view , it has to link in somewhere into the primary i into the road network and it 's not appropriate to link it into er the local road system and er therefore I think it 's inevitable that a linkage will need to be made to the primary road network . |
6 | For the remainder of her half-hour set , the audience was treated to vintage Aurora Blake — in fact , it was doubtful that she 'd ever put on a more powerful show in any of the venues she 'd performed in all over the world . |
7 | He 'd got about half-way through the book , and stuck . |
8 | They 'd arrived from all over the world . ’ |
9 | You will have heard by now about the Government 's proposals for the reorganisation of local government boundaries . |
10 | You must all have heard by now about the Canterbury girls latest ‘ Fight the Flab ’ scheme ? ( ‘ speak for yourself Samantha ’ the rest of the team shouts in disgust ! ) |
11 | ‘ You 'll have to go in here for the time being . ’ |
12 | It was , too , even if Levi might not have noticed until late in the round . |
13 | Doubtless the British would have muddled through somehow without the loan . |
14 | If you do n't mind I 'll stand up cos I 'm gon na have to shoot over there to the plans in some stage in the , in the presentation . |
15 | And Vivienne kept telling me , I should have stayed on just for the grant . |
16 | She yeah , that 's her her nickname , cos she was quite big and she played the nurse in Romeo and Juliet in the season on Stratford on Avon and she did it using a Welsh accent because she thought Shakespeare , having coming from quite near the Welsh Border Country might well have had might well have had a Welsh nurse . |
17 | She yeah , that 's her her nickname , cos she was quite big and she played the nurse in Romeo and Juliet in the season on Stratford on Avon and she did it using a Welsh accent because she thought Shakespeare , having coming from quite near the Welsh Border Country might well have had might well have had a Welsh nurse . |
18 | Having wandered about all over the house , they had ended up in the dining room where the cabinet full of glass was . |
19 | However , we see the thesis as overambitious since it only holds for certain groups and issues and for a particular period of British politics — and that period , may have passed at least for the moment . |
20 | Even Maxton could not have worked for long with the Communists whose infiltration he had done so much to resist . |
21 | ‘ Lucas must have fitted in well with the other three there , ’ Finn observed . |
22 | I would have liked to have checked at once on the state of the horses , but I supposed if there were something wrong with any of them I would hear soon enough . |
23 | The East Anglians were called Norkies , Suffolk Punches or Suffolk Jims and appear , on the whole , to have got on well with the Burtonians though there was the inevitable fracas occasionally . |
24 | Gilbert , who had lost both of his previous encounters and was also reputed to have damaged a locker room wall after one of those defeats , was said to have woken at 4am on the morning of the singles feeling nauseous . |
25 | You will notice that this inference contains the built-in assumption that whatever went on on Earth is likely to have gone on elsewhere in the universe , and this begs the whole question . |
26 | Dealers who had flown in just for the sale were bitterly disappointed ( though they could privately view the works at Christie 's nonetheless ) , and the lavish , hard-bound catalogue became unobtainable overnight . |
27 | Young women had travelled from all over the country during his trial to see him and meet him . |
28 | BIKERS , who had travelled from all over the world for the Isle of Man TT motorcycle races , were left stranded at Liverpool 's Pier Head yesterday . |
29 | Liz , from Northern Ireland , was visiting the Wirral to pass on the art of storytelling to librarians , who had travelled from all over the country Picture : FRAZER BIRD |
30 | Charles the Bald did not simply exploit the church within his kingdom : he had to work with not against the ecclesiastical grain . |