Example sentences of "[modal v] have to pay [adj] [noun] " in BNC.

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1 I 'll have to pay full fare on Sunday now , both ways .
2 In most cases you have up to 56 days interest-free credit but if you miss the deadline , you 'll have to pay high interest rates of up to 30 per cent .
3 That 's something that erm a great many of the multinationals will er try to get round very er and the other , other thing they 'll have to pay fair price which reflects the cost of production and the quality of the product , plus a margin for investment and development .
4 Likewise , you may have to pay other people to do some of the jobs , such as the decorating , that you previously managed yourself .
5 You must follow these to the letter or you may have to pay private charges .
6 If the client takes more of the risks , the contractor 's tender prices may be lower , but the clients may have to pay extra sums as the contract proceeds and the risk becomes quantifiable in the light of claims and variations because of events such as unforeseen ground conditions .
7 According to the Treaty , non-signatories would have to pay hard currency for their imports from the new Soviet Union .
8 We estimate that for the United Kingdom , in 1991-92 , some 230,000 non-pensioners with gross incomes below £10,000 a year would have to pay national insurance contributions on their income from savings .
9 We estimate that a further 1,750,000 people would have to pay national insurance contributions if the directive were adopted .
10 Will my hon. Friend confirm that the directive on part-time working would mean that 1.75 million part-time workers , and their employers , would have to pay national insurance contributions ?
11 Current Account With a Current Account you will have to pay certain charges when you use CheckOver for operating your account .
12 They worry that Thames 's programmes will go to BSkyB ; or that they will have to pay extortionate prices to stop that happening ; or that Pearson will launch other satellite channels .
13 Indeed these two characteristics are all that is needed in the case of the adjective ; the relative clause is in a sense a stalking horse , convenient in that it is more tangible than the relation around which it is built , but unnecessary , and awkward in that it brings with it , in English , the requirement that it must express a tense ; for while it is often possible to read a tense into an adjective there is no reason whatever to suppose that there is always some particular tense present to the mind of the speaker but suppressed , as can be seen from instances like ( 35 ) , where more than one tense could plausibly be grafted onto the sense expressed by the phrase underlined , or , just as well , some adverbial notion like " because " or " if " without any specific tense being implied : ( 35 ) motorists guilty will have to pay heavy fines Likewise , the buildings adjacent of example ( 17 ) simply take their tense from that of the clause as a whole ; if , for instance , we were to switch the tense of the verb in that example in order to shift the whole situation to past time : ( 36 ) the buildings adjacent were closed for three days it would be quite unnecessary to presume that an independent mental re-assignment of tense , from present to past , internal to the phrase buildings adjacent , has to take place as well .
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