Example sentences of "have [verb] [adv] [prep] the [adj] " in BNC.

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1 There is a small triangular park behind it and the crowd may have spilled out from the Great Hall .
2 The -ing form would have referred more to the mere experience of being alone at that moment than to the unexpectedness of finding himself alone .
3 He would have given more to the old woman , but Marshall , despite the way he looked , was probably well heeled .
4 One of the most intriguing of evolutionary clues is the close chemical similarity between many hormones and the substances that function within the nervous system as neurotransmitters , suggesting that perhaps the second group , the neurotransmitters , may have developed evolutionarily from the first .
5 I showed that instead the symmetry would have broken everywhere at the same time , rather than just inside bubbles .
6 In the classical theory of general relativity one can not predict how the universe would have begun because all the known laws of science would have broken down at the big bang singularity .
7 Unless you take a different view , our own preference would be to pursue the question of a travelling display as actively as we can , recognising , however , that if it does not prove feasible for reasons of finance and other resources to mount such a display in the foreseeable future we may have to fall back on the reduced-size Barrel Vault display .
8 Thus , we would have to fall back on the anthropic principle to explain why the electron has the mass and charge that it does .
9 They would have to wait only very slightly more than a second between the astronaut 's 10:59:58 signal and the one that he sent when his watch read 10:59:59 , but they would have to wait forever for the 11:00 signal .
10 ( This , again , will have fallen somewhat in the following two years . )
11 ‘ Will we have to go away from the white house , and the railway and everything ? ’
12 He knew he would have to go through with the nightly ritual .
13 Soon they will have to go up to the front-line again .
14 you 'll have to go elsewhere for the actual paper . )
15 ‘ She 'll have to go down in the fattening fields with the cows . ’
16 The privatization bill will probably have to go back to the upper house , whatever happens in the Commons .
17 Soon there will be nothing left to know and I shall have to go back to the Annual Assessment .
18 ‘ Could n't we have a second chair ? ’ ventured John Gould , inciting the first major row : ‘ We 'll have to re-think the whole thing ’ says James ‘ we 'll have to go back to the very beginning and re-block it ! ’
19 I 'd probably have to go there on the eighth .
20 Eddie was staring at her with eyes as hard as granite but all she said was , ‘ You 'll have to go in at the front door .
21 Therefore they would have to carry on with the remaining group .
22 It makes sense to retain Lineker , for though his rate of scoring may have dropped considerably over the past two years he remains the only England striker of sufficient class to succeed in Italy next summer .
23 Companies behind with their accounts and returns submissions will have to catch up in the next 12 months .
24 ‘ We wanted to play Dublin but all the venues were booked out months ago , so we 'll have to come back in the New Year and do somewhere like the SFX or the Stadium .
25 So I mean it it was it was represented to me er and I felt that there was some logic in it that that this company would not be discussing this deal unless it felt it could make money out of it and that money in the end would have to come out of the local people here .
26 But even so Elizabeth should have known what she was walking into , should have looked closely at the encircling fields , the rock-built house and Hywel all muddy and iced and quiet from winter toil .
27 The broader track from the Horse Fair was better for riding ; he would not have to pass by on the narrow path where he had stumbled over Aldhelm 's body .
28 If we had stayed longer we would have caught up with the three-day Dartington Conference on Building a Sustainable Future for Rural Britain , addressed by such luminaries in this field as Marion Shoard , Malcolm Moseley and David Lock .
29 Had Louis been less concerned with sex , Plekhanov suggests , France might well have fared differently during the Seven Years War .
30 But it is obvious , through public statements , media polls , and so on , not only that B would have fared badly under the old PLP electoral system , but that another MP , C , would have won convincingly under it , because in this example the PLP is to the right ( or to the left ) of the Party outside the House of Commons .
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