Example sentences of "[noun] [modal v] have to wait [art] " in BNC.

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1 Positive thinking will have to wait a while , but it augurs well for one of the young ringsiders who turned up in his smartest suit and said : ‘ What a disgusting fight ; I wish I 'd worn my tracksuit . ’
2 CHRIS Patten may have to wait a year or two before he returns to the Commons .
3 If indeed , as Le Figaro magazine has said , AIDS is a ‘ world war ’ , the definitive account of the war will have to wait a while .
4 FILM star Jenny Seagrove will have to wait a while yet for her Grand Opera House debut .
5 Is she making a promise to the British people that this improvement will be financed by an increase in taxation , or that , just as the Conservative Government have always aspired to improve that target , so will a Labour Government , and the British people will have to wait a long time for such an improvement to materialise ?
6 But the next episode of this little soap opera will have to wait a while .
7 It is left to Minerva to give a more balanced view ; reporting on a large trial of the same drug she notes ‘ men hoping for a drug treatment for benign prostatic hypertrophy will have to wait a while longer … small improvements in a urinary flow rate and a small reduction in the size of the gland have to be balanced against negative effect on both libido and potency . ’
8 But he or his successor will have to wait a little longer for the revenue benefits which should flow from the more buoyant climate for project investment he has tried to create .
9 Sunderland will have to wait a little longer before knowing whether to turn left or right on to the M25 .
10 Those actively interested in diamonds will have to wait a very long time before they will be able to put their hands on these cosmic ornaments .
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