Example sentences of "have [verb] [noun pl] [adv] [adv] [conj] " in BNC.

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1 That bias towards comfort has meant compromises as far as sporting handling is concerned ; so you do n't have to put up with a jittery ride over poorly made up roads .
2 It has changed hands again recently and has received a new facade .
3 Hindsight is very good at telling us that we should have noticed trends much earlier than we did because all the signs were available .
4 Well as I understand they must have had pumps down there or something to or something to keep them dry because er
5 It may have changed hands as often as eight times in a period of twenty years .
6 In general , these initiatives seem to have shifted jobs around rather than created new ones , as some firms have relocated to take advantage of the subsidies ( see Roger Tym and Partners , 1981 , 1982 ; Shutt , 1984 ; Erikson and Syms , 1986 ) .
7 In his twelve years in Paris Modigliani had painted portraits almost exclusively and had lost the ‘ habit of contemplating landscape ’ that had fired him as a boy .
8 ‘ You see , ’ said Narouz , after Fahid had shaken hands all round and departed , ‘ he 's very inexperienced .
9 Well you 've got shades on so when you look around you see whatever 's around inside the game .
10 Cos I mean they 've got signs up round and Calverton
11 and then finally we could finish off with Bill and Ben the Flowerpot Men or whatever they want to call themselves from and they could say well we 're the guys in between we 've got clients out there but we have to deal with printers and estimators and this is what life is like for us .
12 It was the Parish Council themselves who had to consider things very quickly and go for what they could best endeavour but you c er I ca n't see how that can be used to nullify the general view of the public of South Milford and the other parishes .
13 Danny and Teddy had to be evacuated with their school and Bridie had found lodgings as near as possible to where they were going for herself and Monica and Michael .
14 One was Henry Gaze , who had begun tours as early as 1844 with a trip from London to Boulogne and Paris , and took a party to view the battlefield of Waterloo in 1854 .
15 ‘ If you do not believe in an afterlife , you have to sort things out here and now .
16 I mean it may have pleased the Irish government a bit but it 's got implications both domestically and internationally .
17 It 's got a face there and he 's got ears up there and he 's got erm the ears on the other head of his
18 He 's had cuts sometimes before but this was an artery …
19 To answer such questions from potential employers or grant-awarding bodies ( e.g. research institutes ) , teachers have to make assessments as impartially as possible .
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