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

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1 The allegation of the defence had to be met and properly dealt with , so the matter would be returned to the justices for them to look at the circumstances and come to a proper determination after they had heard further evidence .
2 In order to compare the GNP of different nations , the income has to be expressed in a common currency unit .
3 well I went down to the park had to a act , went on again !
4 Mr. Thomas Graham ( Renfrew , West and Inverclyde ) : The new clause offers Scottish people the opportunity to have at least some confidence in the Government 's attitude to the privatisation of the bus service .
5 As it was , the chantry duties of the guilds had been in steady decline since the early fifteenth century , so that by 1547 the majority had for many years been looked upon as burial societies .
6 There is no reason at all why the solution chosen by the majority has to be the best one .
7 The hatcheries have until now been the missing link .
8 The remainder have in many cases , however , devoted more resources to traditional means of advertising rather than adopted new media .
9 Replacing the battery is n't difficult , although it is fiddly and to accomplish this and to gain access to the truss rod a circular plate on the back of the guitar has to be removed .
10 Taking the criterion of the number of ‘ social contacts ’ the housewife has during work time , an association with work satisfaction patterns does emerge .
11 With Training Agency Compacts , the funding has to be seen as " pump-priming " .
12 When he had gone to him , the Prince had in fact at first turned the suggestion down .
13 Also am I right , the person in the provision has to be
14 When it saw what pleasure the servicemen had from the course , the Club was pleased its struggle to keep it open had been successful .
15 The change has to be material , that is , substantial .
16 This can be diagrammed in the following way for the early interception : and as follows for the final one : The to infinitive , therefore , is not strictly speaking a verb but rather a syntactic construction : it involves two parts , the infinitive , a verbal form which evokes a representation of an event produced by means of the verb system , and to , a preposition which indicates a relationship between the place in time where the support has to be situated to begin actualizing the infinitive 's event ( occupied by the representation of non-ordinalized person incorporated within the infinitive ) and some other prior place in time which the support is also represented as occupying or having occupied previous to the realization of this event .
17 The rainstorm had to some extent penetrated the tree-cover .
18 The bike has to be roadworthy and under 20 years old .
19 Failing success in negotiation , however , the struggle had to be carried on by any means possible .
20 There is still an unwritten contract the writer has with the reader .
21 I 'm sure you have noticed the implication of the letter , that the writer has in fact observed Jenny undressing for bed ?
22 They are similar to documentary programmes except that the content is more ephemeral as , by definition , the programmes have to be topical .
23 Further , it has been argued that there is no ‘ Asiatic mode of production ’ , so that the distinctive history of the Orient has to be explained in terms of influences other than a specific mode of production ; for instance , by the character and development of political or religious institutions .
24 If we look at the insurance order and the one relating to building societies , it is quite clear there that the auditor has to be acting in his capacity o er as auditor .
25 The Board had from the start been conscious of its pioneering role .
26 However , it 's easier if you solder the smaller parts first and work upward in size ; the smaller parts are much more difficult to keep in the board prior to soldering if the board has to be balanced on larger components .
27 The matters about which the board have to be satisfied before making a provisional grant are specified in subs .
28 B. The mine owners found that the cost of pumping water was expensive , particularly when the easiest deposits near the surface had been extracted and the mines had to be sunk deeper .
29 The same techniques and ground preparation suits them , though of course the fleece has to be removed when the seedlings are up .
30 The inauguration had to be authorised by a Special General Meeting or at an Annual General Meeting .
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