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

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31 ‘ I thought I 'd have to comb the whole town for you , ’ he began jovially , coming forward .
32 The first return to be affected by these changes will be the one for the period ending 31 January 1993 : the taxpayer will have to apply the existing system for the first two months , and the new procedures for the final month .
33 ‘ You do n't have to play the shrinking virgin for me , ’ he mocked .
34 I FIND MYSELF caught in the toils of having to give a personal explanation for why I ca n't write a personal explanation for the formation of my adult beliefs .
35 They will have to leave a safe distance for it to spread out and to subside .
36 If leave is granted , the applicant will not have to file a fresh application for the substantive order sought .
37 Clearly , a salesperson selling in a combination of these settings will have to adopt a different approach for each .
38 He was disgusted by Pete , but they would have to share the same space for years .
39 We arrived in Venice with time to spare before catching the train to Bologna , where we would have to change a third time for Parma .
40 ‘ Well , we 'll just have to have a male crone for today , ’ replied Miss Thorne in a dangerously quiet voice .
41 Clearly we would have to have a separate system for representing the presence of objects and their features that was not dependent on knowing their identity .
42 The company reckons it has a major advantage over its competitors because it does not have to develop a new product for each market — it simply adds a local user interface , which also cuts down on development and maintenance costs .
43 X/Open said it very much hopes Novell will join its menagerie , but hinted it would have to pay a significant amount for the pleasure .
44 So whilst many innovative cosmetics will be costly , you do n't always have to pay a high price for high tech beauty buys .
45 It will affect not only the coal industry but the consumers who will have to pay an ever-increasing price for gas .
46 Many readers ask the same question , and the fact is you DO have to pay the correct price for goods , even if the shop has mistakenly put a lower price on the label .
47 ‘ But for SeaCat the Northern Ireland public would still be travelling in mundane vessels and having to pay a hefty price for the privilege . ’
48 On one occasion the old crone who managed the NAAFI decided that she would have to charge an extra penny for a cup of tea .
49 Not infrequently he wished his penis did n't have to take the entire responsibility for the success or failure of the operation .
50 Under the Act , an ultimate consumer can claim against the producer of a defective product regardless of the lack of a contractual relationship between the consumer and the producer and without having to show the basic requirements for an action in negligence .
51 When you decide to practise , do not choose a difficult water , or difficult fish , where you are likely to have to wait a long time for a bite .
52 So as not to have to watch the empty road for the postman on the day that the results were due each girl went separately deep into the fields but they were n't able to stay alone for long ; and each time they came back to the road it was still empty .
53 I had to wait a long time for an answer , and just before the door opened I nearly came sufficiently to my senses to run away , but sanity came too late .
54 Gardener John Tobin , of Speke , who had to wait an extra day for his £160-weekly wage , said : ‘ It 's a disgrace . ’
55 It had to provide a solid base for review articles and monographs devoted to the exposure of ‘ bourgeois falsifications ’ emanating from the West .
56 The low headroom on the staircase meant that we had to find a sensible height for the border by doing a ‘ dry ’ run without cutting any material from the roll ( an assistant is invaluable for this ) .
57 If he showed them the latest Washington telegram which he had seen before his departure [ KPs 66 and 85 ] , they would have been made aware that although they had to exercise the utmost restraint for the time being , a new and firmer policy might soon be adopted .
58 In the postwar economy , still beset by shortages of materials , and particularly of steel , the BEA , like the pre-nationalisation industry , had to fight a continuing battle for resources with Sir Edwin Plowden 's Central Economic Planning Staff and ultimately with the Cabinet .
59 Officially , he was supposed to have escaped by sliding down bedsheets from an upper window , but the truth is that CNN 's vice president , Ed Turner — no relation to Ted Turner — had to pay a hefty ransom for him .
60 For instance , there was no prescription charge for diabetes sufferers although people with cystic fibrosis had to pay the full amount for their drugs .
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