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

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1 " Combining mystery with history " : this was a phrase I invented ( or perhaps inadvertently cribbed ) for the blurb of the first novel I wrote under the pseudonym of Evelyn Hervey , The Governess , a story in which Miss Harriet Unwin in her first post as a governess in 1870s London finds herself accused of murder and has to pinpoint the real killer to save herself from the Old Bailey .
2 Barnett will however know in his own mind that he has to replace the 2,000 runs scored by the departed Azharuddin if Derbyshire are to be effective challengers .
3 The court has to consider the child 's welfare as the court 's paramount consideration , and also has to consider the various aspects referred to under section 1(3) , that is they have to consider the wishes of the children , their needs , the likely effects on the children of change , the characteristics of the children , the nature of the harm they have suffered and the capability of the parents or anybody else offering themselves as carers , which would include of course the grandparents in this case .
4 In his view it was ‘ in this general context that one has to consider the latest proposals advanced by the Soviet President ’ .
5 The user has to judge the exact moment to stop .
6 As can be seen , the bond equivalent yield is always less than the simple equivalent yield because with the bond the first coupon payment can be reinvested , whereas this possibility is not available for a discount security , which therefore has to have a higher yield to compensate .
7 To do that , he has to get a new constitution adopted which would abolish the existing parliament .
8 I assumed that the major problems would be financial — the Centre now has to make a considerable charge to cover their costs — and one of occupancy .
9 Each age and each individual has to make the imaginative effort to appropriate the religious tradition and make it their own , as Julian did .
10 One only has to note the impressive erudition manipulated by the likes of Borges , Cortázar , Carpentier or Fuentes or the intertextual references that abound in the new narrative to realize that the Spanish-American writer has long since ceased to be a provincial and is now very much a citizen of the world .
11 Certainly not from the club scene , where an average gate is rarely more than a few hundred and even a big club like Hawick has had to launch a special initiative to arrest their declining membership .
12 I 've also had to put an old cat to sleep , and some children from the new estate brought their hamster in .
13 He may have to wait a few years to enter a Tory Cabinet .
14 ‘ You would have to go a long way to see a better game than that .
15 Drivers coming from Teesside Airport and heading north would have to go a significant distance to use it . ’
16 Indeed , newly issued bills will have to carry a larger discount to match the higher market rates .
17 Thousands of others in low income groups , including disabled people who receive invalidity benefit , would also have to bear the extra fuel cost themselves , added NACAB .
18 ( 2 ) The smaller company will invariably have to pass an ordinary resolution increasing its authorised share capital and giving its directors authority to allot new shares under CA 1985 , s80 in order to give effect to the share exchange ( a s89 disapplication will not be necessary as the new share issue will be for a non-cash consideration ) .
19 I 'll have to write a wee note to say that I 've to come and get you about ten to twelve .
20 The chances are that Britain will have to find a new place to dump waste by the end of the decade .
21 In another series of cases the Court has condemned national laws which require undertakings which are licensed to carry out particular activities in one member state having to obtain a second licence to provide the same services in another member state where the licensing requirements in the first member state adequately safeguard all necessary requirements for the protection of the public interest .
22 You will probably find that the sander will not work up to the very edge of the floor , so you will have to hire a smaller unit to finish off the job .
23 The public will have to foot a large bill come what may .
24 Mr De Haan said the original reason for going public was his father 's concern that as a private company , with no market in its shares , the family might one day be faced with the prospect of having to sell the entire business to meet death duties .
25 Even where you have to answer set questions — as in an exam — a choice between alternatives usually has to be made ; and not only do you have to pick a particular question to answer , but you also have to decide exactly what it is that the question is asking you to do .
26 Do children have to cross a busy street to get to it ?
27 I 'd have to buy an electric boiler to replace the gas one which had been leaking for a week now .
28 And I think it w w was quite difficult for people because they 'd either have to walk a long way to try and make a telephone call .
29 ‘ I am capable of cooking for myself , ’ he assured her stiffly , and she knew she would have to do a little begging to keep him from another burst of anger .
30 However , [ 15b ] is less direct than [ 15c ] in the sense that the hearer would have to derive the contextual implication conveyed explicitly in [ 15c ] in order to establish how well B got on .
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