Example sentences of "[conj] [adv] [adv] [pers pn] have " in BNC.

  Next page
No Sentence
1 I did n't know any details , but a month or so ago I had a row with my uncle and he said then that I must n't count on anything from him ; if I did I 'd be disappointed . ’
2 A minute or so later she had been connected and the reservations clerk was asking for details of her ticket .
3 I 'm not sure how the connection was made , in that I build canoes ( wooden canoes-wood — dog sled ? ) , but a week or so later I had a set of plans .
4 They certainly were n't anywhere on the Moon , or anywhere else I 've ever heard of , before or since .
5 Well perhaps because they were more idealist and that now they 're becoming more realist but they 're still erm I mean they 're learning from their past mistakes and they 've seen that right so we have to have a moderate policy which is gon na take us a little bit further towards socialism .
6 They seem delighted and although so far we have only had telephone contact , I feel sure they will be able to drive their ‘ new ’ acquisition for many years to come .
7 She 'd always had boyfriends , although so far she had n't been tempted to engage in any serious commitment .
8 He holds it through a riveting performance of the Toccata , a sumptuously lyrical adagio ( although perhaps here it has more the air of an andante amabile ) and a gloriously ebullient Fugue .
9 I mean last week the choppers werny even gettin in to pick them off the Rigs what with the gales and that so basically I 've just got to expect him when I see him .
10 Mr Yegor Gaidar , First Deputy Prime Minister , said : ‘ I am convinced that so far we have agreed on effective co-operation in order to resolve the problem by joint effort .
11 The way that so far we have approached the matter has been highly theoretical .
12 I saw the evil light in his eyes and knew that so far they had only been playing with me : their real intent was to kill .
13 She gave a cool glance in return , cautiously pleased that so far she had betrayed nothing of her reaction at standing so close to him .
14 Lee , speaking at a news conference at an hotel near his Wilmslow home , said that so far he had not made contact with Swales .
15 The writer of this book has to confess that so far he has been so hidebound by tradition that he has not yet brought himself to write key-signatures for the horns , but he admits that the only argument in favour of this is that the lack of signature acts as a guide to the conductor 's eye in spotting the horn parts in the score .
16 ‘ My dear girl , you could never in your life look like an old hag , and you seem to forget that so far I 've never seen you at your best .
17 You have to admit that so far I have played Honest Joe .
18 The terrorist organisation has said that so far it has simply been ‘ unlucky ’ .
19 Well they just went back and said they could n't want something that much maybe she 's gone over her limit .
20 Willow warblers sang meandering cadences from the trees and a vehement sedge warbler vocalised from a reed bed , letting us know that once again they had safely survived the perilous crossing of arid desert and squally sea .
21 The Government 's intention was that these funds would be a way of helping with one-off exceptional circumstances affecting only a small minority of students , but the reality is that once again they have been shown to be completely wrong .
22 As the sun came up and he was able to make out the grassy track along which he had been striding through the night he realised that once again he had missed the verderers , that there were no fresh hoof-marks .
23 He returns to his routine , but finds that once again he has failed .
24 You will find the programme for the coming season attached and I hope you will agree that once more we have planned varied and stimulating sessions for you .
25 ‘ So that ever afterwards you have a mark and can prove you are truly married ? ’
26 I think it did have a lot to do with the status that being different conferred , for in spite of the austerity of our childhood , we believed that we were better than other people , the food we ate being a mark of this , because our mother told us so — so successfully that even now I have to work hard at actually seeing the deprivations .
27 Second , there is a problem about knowledge of the future ; Goldman 's suggestion seems to require that here either we have an instance of backward causation ( the future causing the past ) or that knowledge of the future is impossible since causes can not succeed their effects .
28 So I 'm not a for a moment suggesting that some rules and regulations are n't needed and I think that er the trouble is that every rule and regulation that is passed in this house , there 's always an excuse for it and there 's usually a very good reason for it , but that is the problem that the government faces and it 's quite fairly er a problem the treasury face when they introduce these statutory instruments because er no one can disagree that fraud must be stamped out , all I 'm actually saying is that unfortunately upstairs we have a deregulation bill going ahead at all pace with hundreds of clauses and hundreds of new rules to try and red hundreds of new clauses to reduce the number of rules and here we are downstairs on the floor we have passing for very good reason perhaps , more rules and regulations and there are four more tonight and I believe that every government department Madam deputy speaker , has a minister specially appointed to keep an eye on deregulation and I just wondered although er my honourable friend on the front bench mentioned that er the even the D T I minister responsible for deregulation has looked at these , I wonder if there is a minister in the treasury , they 've actually put a minister in the treasury responsible for deregulation or is the ministry actually above deregulation because I think that er I got the impression that the that every ministry would have a deregulation minister and I think it would be rather useful to know who the deregulation minister is in the treasury .
29 What it means , of course , is that very often we have different definitions of experience and reality from men , and that much of what we say is critical of men and about what they have done to women .
30 The injustice to the home-owner is sometimes made worse by the fact that very often he has n't the money to pay for the repairs and has to borrow from the bank in order to pay the bill .
  Next page