Example sentences of "have [verb] [prep] [noun sg] [prep] [noun sg] " in BNC.

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31 ‘ Nate and the Executive Committee have agreed in principle to phase-out all regional activities and bring the whole god-damned shootin' match right back here to Detroit , where I always said it should be . ’
32 This will be based on information which has been made available to me or which I have requested in accordance with clause [ specify ] of the Agreement .
33 However , my brief was to make a virtue of necessity , as we all have to do from time to time , and concentrate on the planting .
34 ‘ We have to maintain the high standards which we have set in order for growth to continue . ’
35 Previous chapters have dealt at length with market research , sales and market forecasting , consumer behaviour and market segmentation .
36 However the influence of television practice is strong and many publishers of classroom video materials for language teaching have opted for continuity of character , an ongoing story and a repeated format .
37 The view is excellent from all seats , although the two passengers in the middle of the benches have to lean from side to side to make the most of it .
38 Some of Britain 's leading scientists have gone on strike over pay .
39 Two huntsmen have gone on trial on cruelty charges .
40 Three people have gone on trial in connection with the discovery of a multi-million pound drugs factory .
41 One of the initiatives is to encourage more teacher placements in industry , so that those in education who have gone from school to college and back to school as teachers and who have not experienced life in industry or commerce can be exposed to it , the better to assist their pupils in preparing for a working career .
42 " I have gone from failure to failure , with France , alas , the loser .
43 That would be the normal price bracket for a Dior or Chanel creation — but now the supermodels have gone from catwalk to catalogue .
44 From that moment they have gone from strength to strength and last year reached the final of the Pilkington Cup only to lose in extra time .
45 The crunch game came at the second hurdle when Sudbury toppled the mighty London Welsh at Moorsfield , after which they have gone from strength to strength , bolstered by a refreshing brand of running rugby .
46 In a year when all other parts of the charitable sector have been hit by the drop in disposable income , environmental charities have gone from strength to strength .
47 He won the award for the regular habitat improvements made on his 1,680 acre property , where he and his keeper alan Smith four years ago gave up rearing pheasants , and built up wild birds , both pheasants and partridges , which have gone from strength to strength .
48 Scottish ospreys have gone from strength to strength .
49 As LCD technology has evolved so these displays have increased in resolution with VGA now being possible — even in simulated colour .
50 ULSTER pensioners have reacted with horror to Government proposals to pay pensions directly into bank accounts .
51 TWO men have appeared in court in connection with a gang fight and shooting at the Market Trader pub in Kirkby .
52 A number of principles have emerged on remoteness of damage .
53 So that 's what we have to check from time to time .
54 Rochlin appropriates for masculinity , albeit in a form so highly selective it might hardly be recognized , that sense of the inherent instability of identity which Lacanians and others have taken from psychoanalysis for feminism .
55 I 'm sorry mummy had to rush us so much this morning it 's just when we 're in a rush we have to get to school on time you see , it 's a bit rotten when you 're only three is n't it ?
56 Japan 's large , integrated steel mills have switched from coal to oil as well as implementing stringent energy efficiency improvements .
57 Meanwhile , in America , the New FADS have signed to Mute/Electra through Play It Again Sam .
58 By contrast , particular skills tend only to be identified by those who have specialized by method of intervention ( for example , marital counselling ) or by client sub-group ( for example , fostering and adoption ) .
59 In the far north , where the landscape is turned white in winter by snow , mammals like rabbits and birds like ptarmigan have to change from brown to white and back again when the snows melt in spring .
60 Indeed , they are keen to advertise the fact by stamping their personalities on their home , something which is evidenced by looking at homes in Britain which have passed from public to private ownership .
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