Example sentences of "have [verb] [prep] [det] [noun sg] [coord] " in BNC.
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1 | Now then , if the council could , could 've come to some agreement and put in there , it would of made it right for us , now , you see we 've done so before , this is what I do n't like about he , he applies for planning permission does er the notice was no bigger than six inches long and four |
2 | and that , and the Dracula has to go towards that person but if that person says someone 's else 's name before you get them |
3 | It was a wholly objectionable idea , it was rightly opposed by very nearly everybody who spoke in the debate and the Government has withdrawn from that decision and that I welcome unreservedly but My Lords a great deal that is objectionable remains in Clause two of this Bill . |
4 | SINGER Dannii Minogue , 21 , has fallen for former Home and Away star Julian McMahon . |
5 | We are aware of the campaigning work your section has undertaken in this regard and would like to express to you our genuine appreciation for your efforts . |
6 | The title of this work suggests that it is an essay in the sociology of transport , a subject that has crept into some degree and other courses at University level . |
7 | They have two natural gaits the gentle , lolloping , forward movement of the warren on a summer evening and the lightning dash for cover that every human has seen at some time or other . |
8 | It was only to be expected that a man who has written with such insight and style about Calcutta and New York , cricket and the crossing of deserts would do justice to a life-long passion . |
9 | Many generous and warm tributes have been paid to my right hon. Friend the Member for Worcester ( Mr. Walker ) for not only his speech but the massive contribution that he has made to this Parliament and our country during the last generation . |
10 | There is no doubt that a form of parasitic violence has battened upon this pastime and flourished to such an extent that it has almost killed the host institution . |
11 | That possibility was handled by Bob Beckman , an American economist-writer who has settled in this country and has built a reputation for the uncanny accuracy of his predictions , though it is fair to say that not everyone agrees with his views of his predictions . |
12 | The organisation , local and national , has to build on this environment and use it as powerfully as possible . |
13 | Turning to the company cases , the dictum in Reg. v. Morris [ 1984 ] A.C. 320 has led to much confusion and complication where those in de facto control of the company have been charged with theft from it . |
14 | But Jones has asked for another week and FA spokesman David Bloomfield said : ‘ We have acceded to his request . ’ |
15 | ‘ I think it is tragic that anybody has to die in this conflict but the Peter Brookes and Richard Needhams of this world have the solution in their hands . |
16 | Books on railways are generally expensive in these inflated days but considering the amount of work that has gone into this volume and the specialist nature of the work then £7.95 represents excellent value . |
17 | Other habitat losses have resulted from farm mechanisation which , requiring larger and more conveniently-shaped fields , has resulted in much hedge and scrub clearance . |
18 | A great deal has happened in that time and I have enjoyed every minute of it . |
19 | But the hearer still has to act on this indication and find which particular farmer is thereby being referred to . |
20 | At a time when crime has doubled in this country and is increasing at a rate of 28 per cent . |
21 | Eventually , she deduced the kid must have gone to find Nathan , who 'd slept in that morning and missed breakfast . |
22 | When I came back to England I was very humbled really to erm because I arrived in Nepal three hours before that crash and erm a lot of people had thought I 'd died in that crash and erm the patients had thought I 'd died as well and they had to put a big notice outside to say that I 'd been alright , they had lots of people ringing up . |
23 | She said she 'd gone after that house but she 's not in the blasted catchment area though ! |
24 | It was the first time we 'd returned to any location and I thought it must be a good sign . |
25 | It is nonetheless a matter of deep regret that the Board has had to depart from this project and that the first of these care centres on Whalsay , which would have been opened in November nineteen ninety one had the agreement been left unaltered , was still not open at the beginning of this month . |
26 | To go to the one in the park we 'd have to go up that hill and there 's no way I can push this buggy with Bryony in the front and all these fruit and vegetables I could n't get up and the hang on to you two with your reins I could n't get up that steep hill . |
27 | ‘ The proposition need not be questioned that where an Act purports , invalidly , to require a payment to be made , leaving the liability to be enforced by means of an action in which the invalidity of the statute is an available defence , a person who might have relied upon that defence but has paid without raising it should not be held , just because he was obeying the de facto command of a legislature , to have made the payment involuntarily . |
28 | It would have won round any man but Angel Clare . |
29 | New roads that would need to be provided would therefore have to come from that direction and and it itself will cut a swathe through the open countryside . |
30 | I can stand in front of the screen , I can look at the simulations , I can stop them whenever I want to stop them and look at them , it gives me ideas about how the buildings might have looked at that time and it gives me a whole range of variations as to as to what can be done in terms of their reconstructions . |