Example sentences of "[pron] have [art] [noun] of " in BNC.
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1 | Nearly everyone has a snapshot of their dog caught at some amusing moment , and now is your chance to have it distributed nationwide in a leaflet or on a greeting card . |
2 | It 's vital that everyone has a sense of belonging to the school and is kept fully informed of events that are taking place . |
3 | Everyone has the goal of development but the method of getting there varies a lot . ’ |
4 | To take an example , suppose it is considered generally socially desirable ( on the basis , say , of needs ; Weitzman , 1977 ) that everyone has the chance of access to a reasonable water supply . |
5 | The information produced can be amalgamated and distributed to all the learners , so that everyone has the benefit of the work of the entire group . |
6 | And while not everyone has the gift of the evangelist , everyone must be prepared to contribute their gift and fulfil the role of witness in the church 's evangelistic programme . |
7 | Everyone has the gift of life — and for the sake of just a little pain over a week it 's a wonderful opportunity to take . |
8 | Everyone has the defects of their qualities , darling — or is it the qualities of their defects ? |
9 | Within a few weeks he began to feel better , and his depression , anxiety , tiredness , panic attacks , fainting and sweating are now a thing of the past Problems , due to too much caffeine are fairly common , but not everyone has the sort of symptoms that Ken experienced . |
10 | But on nothing has the culture of contentment been so successful as in shaping the accepted attitude toward the state . |
11 | Game theory , in general , postulates a set of ‘ players ’ ( the ‘ interested parties ’ , be they individuals or groups ) , each of whom has a set of strategies ; strategies meaning courses of action that can be taken , which may be conditional on moves made by the others . |
12 | CHOOSE the wine and make sure someone has the job of dealing with it on Christmas Day . |
13 | That cargo plane of yours has a range of three thousand , six hundred sea miles . |
14 | I realized I 'd no experience of organizing a memorial party and did n't know anybody who had . |
15 | There were bookshelves along one wall , with titles ranging from John Keegan 's Six Armies in Normandy and Richard Holmes 's Firing Line , which I 'd read , to anonymous pulp volumes called A Social History of the Hand Grenade or similar , which I 'd no intention of reading . |
16 | I must have knocked it or something and I 'd a couple of shots left and I ought to have shot the swine but I could n't , not while he was sitting there killing himself laughing . |
17 | And I 'd a breath of fresh air . |
18 | And then there was this memorable exchange : ‘ Vic , can I have a couple of words please ? ’ |
19 | Can I have a couple of these mummy ? |
20 | Can I have a couple of er chicken fillets please ? |
21 | Could I have a drink of water ? ’ |
22 | ‘ Mummy , can I have a drink of water ? ’ |
23 | Clare can I have a drink of water please ? |
24 | Clare can I have a drink of water please ? |
25 | Group members ' perceptions of expected behaviour are concerned with bits of behaviour ( ‘ Can I make jokes in this group ? ’ ) , rather than with the behaviour as a continuing phenomenon ( ‘ Do I have a sense of humour ? ’ ) . |
26 | But why should n't I have a sense of humour ? ’ |
27 | and do you know , she had the most enormous Christmas er lunch , about six o'clock she said , could I have a bowl of soup ? |
28 | ‘ Could I have a pair of boots ? ’ |
29 | Is this a mating ritual or do I have a pair of schizos in the tank ? |
30 | Can I have a pair of scissors , I think I 'll cut |