Example sentences of "have [to-vb] for the [noun sg] [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 ‘ And of course the Pistols will have to wait for the return of better weather . ’
3 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 !
4 ‘ It is certainly very strange but we will have to wait for the outcome of an investigation . ’
5 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 .
6 ‘ It 's something you 'll have to continue for the rest of your life .
7 She 'd just have to send for the rest of her things .
8 And it is to the trade union that they would have to account for the exercise of that authority .
9 If a coherent theory of literacy is to be developed , it will have to account for the place of written language , both in relation to the forms of spoken language and also in relation to the communicative functions served by different types of language in different social settings .
10 Our understanding of certain phenomena , it would seem , does have to allow for the possibility of God at work .
11 No doubt if the number of member states of the European Community grows considerably , quite new institutions will have to develop for the government of the Community .
12 Remember though you will have to pay for the meter to be installed .
13 He would have to pay for the policing of that out of this year 's money .
14 That junior may have to pay for the victory with a heavy defeat in the future .
15 At present local NHS services do not have to pay for the care of individuals in Regional Secure Units or Special Hospitals ; they can shuffle off their responsibilities by claiming to have no suitable facilities and , in any case , such people receive little public support or sympathy .
16 She will need twice-daily doses of an anti-rejection drug which she will have to take for the rest of her life .
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