Example sentences of "[pron] [verb] not have much " in BNC.

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1 That would take capital , and I do not have much money .
2 ‘ I 'll handle this , ’ said Dad ‘ Look Amy , you mother and I do not have much money .
3 I am not quite sure who it was I sat next to because I am such a slow eater that I did not have much time for conversation .
4 I only know I did not have much fun this summer . ’
5 Moreover , they are often flown by early solo pilots who do not have much experience of flying them or of solo aerotowing .
6 For those who do not have much real competence in other languages , there is the possibility of coming to terms with poems in the older , more remote forms of English .
7 ’ John made it clear enough that he was thinking of the Roman curia : ‘ In our everyday ministry we often have to listen , greatly to our sorrow , to those … who do not have much discretion or balance ’ .
8 If consumerism is to be as important as this suggests , then the definition of consumer needs to be wide : it must include the ‘ hidden consumers ’ who do not have much contact with social services departments , and it needs to include both clients and their carers .
9 If you do not have much dressmaking ability but still want to make this type of use of the woven material produced by your knitting machine , you could well turn to the diagrams that most machine knitting patterns supply .
10 She did not have much time and believed it would have saved his job .
11 She did not have much baggage with her , as most of her belongings , accumulated in her two years ' stay in New York , had been sent ahead by sea .
12 We did not have much time to smarten up the old girl and it took much hard work to soften the ravages of time .
13 This time no expression came over their faces and he knew they did not have much time to live .
14 Land Rovers do not self centre very much because in common with most beam axled four wheel drive vehicles they do not have much of a caster angle on the front axle .
15 People feel that they do not have much of a life , because in their terms , their lives seem unfulfilling and pointless .
16 The verdicts are implicitly defining what is appropriate behaviour for women and suggesting that they do not have much of a safeguard if they stray into areas regarded as ‘ male territory ’ whether it be a barracks room or a street late at night .
17 For lenders there is clearly a more desirable proposition in a public house that has a higher beverages or ‘ wet ’ side than a ‘ dry ’ side , because if someone wants to purchase a pub with a high ‘ dry ’ side , and they do not have much catering experience , then their turnover could diminish rapidly .
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