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

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1 Print enthusiasts will have to wait for the publication of David Landau and Peter Parshall 's forthcoming book on Renaissance printmaking to be published by Yale University Press next year for a full discussion of such matters .
2 O'Neill 's suspect views were known to many unionists and the conservatives did not have to wait for the fruits of O'Neillism , however timid they may have been .
3 ‘ And of course the Pistols will have to wait for the return of better weather . ’
4 And to complete the picture there is an example of an unconserved clock … but visitors may have to wait for the Museum of Scotland to see this one tick !
5 ‘ It is certainly very strange but we will have to wait for the outcome of an investigation . ’
6 Alloa , with a 52-0 victory over Cambuslang , and Livingston , with a 14-13 win against Linlithgow , stay in Division Four but Linlithgow will have to wait for the result of Cartha Queen 's Park 's final match before their fate is known against the already relegated Lismore .
7 We should not have to apologize for a vow of celibacy .
8 ‘ It 's something you 'll have to continue for the rest of your life .
9 As far as new managers go , I 'd have to go for a partnership between Mr. Robson & Mr. Hoddle .
10 She would have to work for a month for that .
11 It was inevitable therefore that she should have looked for a career in motor racing — at least that was what she told herself .
12 Personally , I would have voted for the lads at Cain 's Brewery but Twitters may have got the jitters if the revamped Higson 's had made the headlines .
13 ‘ For my part I do not think that the House of Lords in that case had in mind the special position in the administration of justice of the Director of Public Prosecutions and the Crown Prosecution Service or would have been prepared to extend the effect of the orders of a civil court in such a way as indirectly to bind them in the performance of their duties in relation to the criminal law and before the criminal courts in circumstances in which they had not sought and may not have wished for an order for discovery .
14 She could have wept for the agony of raw longing that burned through her .
15 It would n't have done for the women to be met by his men .
16 Investors will have to apply for a minimum of £240 worth of the shares , with an initial instalment of £100 .
17 I was thinking of all I could have bought for the baby with fifty pounds .
18 So what you would have had for the whole of ninety two and the whole of ninety three will all come in , will all come in the second half of ninety three .
19 It introduces the thought that in his speech as well as in his writing , Johnson understood that the essence of art lies in the perfect marriage of form and content , therefore , Boswell may have reached for an accuracy beyond sycophancy .
20 ‘ Three weeks ago we would have settled for a situation like this .
21 She 'd just have to send for the rest of her things .
22 Violence was a daily part of their lives , and the men paid Trent 's leash as little attention as they would have spared for the commonplace of a bleeding corpse sprawled in the gutter back home .
23 He could not have asked for a clearer-case of his anti-Christian enemy ‘ trampling on the moral law ’ than in Hungary .
24 Had she not met Flynn , she would merely have asked for the farms to be restored to Maran Hill ; but the news from London made her too bold .
25 He looked at her in silence for several long moments , but instead of denying the accusation he said , ‘ As my acting hostess I expect you to know what they 're like , otherwise it will be impossible for you to explain that honeymooners expecting luxury suites with king-sized beds will have to settle for a roll in the hay . ’
26 But Dixon , who spent nine years at Stamford Bridge , may have to settle for a place on the subs ' bench as he continues his return from a back injury .
27 Yet Thomas , 17 , who made a scoring debut as a substitute last week , could have to settle for a place on the bench again as Hearts look to John Robert- son and Ian Ferguson to shoulder the responsibility in attack .
28 After a lousy annual meeting and a lousy result against Crystal Palace , Alex Ferguson might reasonably have hoped for a change of fortune .
29 He should have gone for a walk on the Downs or gone shopping in the town for antiques , or spent the morning browsing in bookshops .
30 And it is to the trade union that they would have to account for the exercise of that authority .
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