Example sentences of "have [to-vb] [adv prt] with the [noun sg] " in BNC.
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1 | Garry would dearly love the club captaincy back but he is realistic enough to know he just has to get on with the game . |
2 | Executives who commit corporate crime are not coerced into it , they do not necessarily have to go along with the advice or instructions of superiors . |
3 | We 'll have to carry on with the Week of the Lion tour if only to give there good people something to do . |
4 | But I 'm thinking , I 'm think I 've got this terrible feeling I 'd have to come on with the princess , if we 've just got married |
5 | Most owners , however , will keep the engine speed between 2000rpm and 4500rpm where there is sufficient torque to outperform any remaining GTi without having to put up with the din from a high-revving multi-valve power GTi unit . |
6 | ‘ Josh will have to put up with the life that his mother can afford to lead . ’ |
7 | It seems that England might just have to put up with the barracking of the public , press and the other home nations Wales , Scotland and Northern Ireland . |
8 | The Government are hoping to carry on and according to the Secretary of State for the Environment the people will have to put up with the tax until 1993 . |
9 | You 'll just have to put up with the printer chugging away . |
10 | I shall just have to put up with the pain . ’ |
11 | Everyone should follow Marshall 's example here because the amount of effect level needed can change from gig to gig and the mix pot makes this adjustment instantly , without your having to mess about with the processor 's levels . |
12 | ‘ You 'll have to check in with the policeman , ’ the Staff Nurse yelled after us . |
13 | It would take about an hour and a half to fix and heat up the oven ; and , of course , once it was started we had to carry on with the job of re-tyring . |
14 | Clive had to have them , because the competition did , but since the benefits were at best indirect he had to come up with the idea of asking the students from each country to get together and prepare a ‘ typical national dish ’ . |
15 | ‘ He 'd been out of football for nine months in France , and he had to put up with the boo-ing . |
16 | So he just had to put up with the noise . |
17 | We had to put up with the traffic . |
18 | He had been ten weeks in the bush , a womanless bush , and Olga Stych had to put up with the fact . |
19 | If they laugh , they have to go round with the cushion . |
20 | Then you would n't have people thinking that going to a Phish concert means you have to put up with the smell of somebody who did n't do very well at school . |
21 | Ninety -nine gardeners in every hundred have to put up with the garden they have , facing the way it is , and can not pick and choose or move it around . |
22 | Exhibitors also complain they have to put up with the theft of their merchandise , and suspect their bills are inflated by ‘ ghost ’ workers , who are paid but do no work . |
23 | Although you have to put up with the pain for a shorter time , you may not have any real build-up to it — suddenly , strong contractions hit you — so it 's difficult to pace yourself and put into practice the breathing exercises you rehearsed so carefully at antenatal classes . |
24 | Why should those who come to the Park for enjoyment and healthy exercise — walking , cycling , jogging etc — have to put up with the danger , the noise , and the pollution created by those who are looking only to their own convenience ? |
25 | Ideology apart , managers have to get on with the job of managing , maintaining society as a going concern , and upholding organisational goals with the cooperation of other members . |
26 | And do n't be feeling that you have to stay in with the family . |