Example sentences of "[verb] have [to-vb] [adv] [conj] " in BNC.

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1 However , Chris Smith , owner of Westfield Sports Cars , claims that his company has had to spend more than £250,000 on readying the ZEi for the showroom , as well as allocating two full-time staff to the project .
2 A sports centre in north Oxfordshire has had to close today because of a leakage of almost one thousand litres of potentially hazardous chemicals .
3 THIS WEEK 's attempt to divert the flow of lava gushing out of the erupting Mount Etna in Sicily could be an expensive failure — because a British team of vulcanologists taking essential measurements has had to return home after its money ran out .
4 One is that the children who are caught have to go again until they manage to sit down before being touched .
5 Both for not being prepared , not giving the opening of this course the importance that it did deserve , and obviously for the embarrassment that er you must have felt having to sit there while I made a total fool of myself .
6 Er , now look Barbara , I know you have n't been in the job as long as the other two , but er , really you 're going to have to do better than this I 'm afraid .
7 ‘ I 'm going to have to leave soon if I 'm not to miss my plane , ’ she said .
8 I , I 'm going to have to have more than one meeting and let people , say you 've got to come to one or the other and have them at different times during the week .
9 I mean having to come upstairs before you even get into the house is n't very good either , cos I mean with kids you 've got to carry the pushchairs up and everything and carry kids up and carry all your shopping up , it 's not , it 's not very practical having them upstairs .
10 I meant having to curse now and again .
11 Now my own view is is that this point in time we all do have to get together and agree .
12 Edward had had to defer rather than abandon his plans , however , and in 1356 he sent Lancaster to Normandy with a small force of no more than 1,000 archers and 1,400 men-at-arms , which included supporting contingents from Normandy and from the Breton garrisons .
13 However , erm this is the first chance I 've had to speak today so I ca n't take all the blame of the er , of the , of the late start , erm I do n't know whether it would make it any easier to the my colleagues on my right or my left erm to accept the Liberal resolution .
14 Those who imagine that they see the spectre of euthanasia raising its head look with particular misgiving at the doctor 's decision to discontinue ventilation.4 Those lawyers who have given the issue their attention have accepted the common factual assumption that turning off a ventilator is significant , and have then sought legal arguments by which to justify it.5 For they have had to recognize both that it is a common medical practice , and that it is one which prima facie calls for some justification .
15 Edna 's had to go home because Mum 's been took sick . ’
16 It 's had to make more than two hundred people redundant at its Newport Pagnell factory .
17 Britain 's had to provide more than £27 billion ( $17 billion ) against bad loans over that period .
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