Example sentences of "[adv] have [to-vb] on [noun sg] " in BNC.

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1 The Secretary of State , I 'm sure would would obviously have to take on board what was embodied in the final structure plan .
2 They did not have to take on board the Jewish ceremonial Law .
3 ‘ We 'll just have to continue on foot , ’ she said briskly .
4 Then one day , before breakfast , I found her in the sitting room , and no longer had to rely on hearsay .
5 It 's not often that I can say a piece of equipment is inspiring , but reviewing the A2 actually got me coming up with some ideas that I just had to get on tape .
6 is that basically erm you you go and work as a dogsbody and erm graduates are allowed to take the exams within two years and and you 'd probably have to go on night school thing or something
7 But you also have to think on behalf of the child .
8 Men with malaria now had to go on patrol .
9 We were afraid , but we often had to go on shore to get more water .
10 I ca n't remember when I have n't had to work on Christmas Day became the animals have never got round to recognizing it as a holiday ; but with the passage of the years the vague resentment I used to feel has been replaced by philosophical acceptance .
11 Well , she 'd simply have to depend on luck to get her through .
12 But presumably that balance is n't something that 's encouraged either by the discipline of the job , or by a culture that assumes that men do n't have to take on responsibility for those things because women do .
13 Wish I did n't have to go on watch . ’
14 Ken did n't have to put on drag in Carry On Screaming , the first of three 1966 releases , but in Carry On — Do n't Lose Your Head , he did get to wear a woman 's frilly corset which did n't go all that badly with the curled wig he wore as Citizen Camembert , the ‘ big cheese ’ of the French Revolutionary secret police .
15 So I simply had to walk on stage after an extended interval and tell the audience we would have to end the performance .
16 During the football season ( eight months of the year ! ) the early turn men parade at 6 a.m. to 2 p.m. , return for a few hours , then re-parade 6 p.m. to 10 p.m. , and sometimes have to go on duty at 6 a.m. the following morning .
17 The reasonableness of this is manifest when viewed in the light of the fact that a great many of the most important human decisions do , after all , ultimately have to rely on mathematics for their resolution , if only by virtue of the principle of the majority vote being allowed to prevail in , for example , political matters .
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