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

  Next page
No Sentence
1 So if , as seems likely , we have to wait a long time for a follow up to the triumphant Glyndebourne production , we should be all the more grateful for occasions like the Royal Liverpool Philharmonic Orchestra 's concert performance ( sponsored by English Estates ) .
2 But arrivals follow departures and the new appears very promising — even if you have to wait a little time for it .
3 Delivery times for most items were generally satisfactory , but there appears to be a possibility that readers consulting early or rare books in the South Reading Room have to wait a considerable time for items ordered over the lunchtime period .
4 you have to wait a few days for it to clear do n't ya ?
5 In order to work properly the dominant forces in each of the three spheres have to monopolize the key resources for which there is great competition .
6 But I 'm the one who has to stand up out there and do it , and so while I take his point I have to find the right levels for myself .
7 That 's the trouble with doing all these films and tellies — you just have to remember a little bit for a short take .
8 What 's more , if you have to buy the same machine for more money elsewhere , you can also claim the difference in price from the original supplier .
9 But you should cast to the swim using a silhouette marker on the horizon , thus giving you practice for when you have to use the same silhouette for guidance in darkness .
10 I have to do every damned thing for myself .
11 Obviously when you budget you have to allow the most money for the rooms you arc actually going to live in , but once you have decided on what cash is available you must turn considerable thought and care — if not money — to making your hall as warm and welcoming and practical as you can .
12 Firstly , we have to realise the full potential for growth and profitability of our plastic tube technology .
13 ‘ Every month the city verderers have to deliver a fat buck for the Dean 's kitchen ; in thanksgiving the Dean and Chapter perform this dance . ’
14 Then if there is a half-page or table , we have to pay a whole page for it , which is double the price of a half-page of ordinary type .
15 From my point of view , one of the most powerful arguments that needs to be addressed is the argument about individual freedom and this is always important to me about , if you 're going to take an action that limits somebody 's freedom , you damn well have to have a good reason for it .
16 That is why we have to have a new basis for valuation , a capital values tax .
17 That , in some cases , that has been explored for the storage of heat in the summer which you would then use in the winter , but everywhere one comes back to storage nuclear power stations can not be turned up and down quickly at the moment , so either with electricity you have to have a uniform demand for electricity , or you have to , say , burn gas to provide an alternative way of generating electricity which can be turned up and down at will .
18 If you have to have a special diet for health reasons , and find you can not afford the price , make sure you are claiming the supplementary benefits to which you are entitled .
19 I mean , what we 're trying to do in the visual arts is to spend what limited money we have to produce a better situation for the visual artist and for the public who gets pleasure and enlightenment from visual arts than exists at the moment , so rather than just prop up the status quo , which is what is would be very easy to do if one just kept the pot boiling so to speak by giving a few grants to artists here and sitting at the centre of a spider 's web in Tunbridge Wells waiting for applications to come in to us and then responding .
20 they have to produce an annual report for
  Next page