Example sentences of "[modal v] have [adv] [art] [noun sg] " in BNC.

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1 We should have simply a rebate system in which a flexible , generous and realistically tapered rebate takes account of the incomes of the people in any house .
2 The hall should have only a minimum of furniture in it , and nothing too near to the bottom of the stairs which could increase her injuries if she fell .
3 Each electron in an atom must have exactly the energy appropriate to one or other of the orbitals .
4 ‘ You must have quite a way with animals , ’ Fen went on .
5 You must have quite a lot of memories .
6 Says Jim Whiston , ‘ This time next year we 'll have double the number of accreditations and by 1990 the vast majority of businesses in C&P , ICI Films and ICI Advanced Materials will have attained BS standards or those laid down by manufacturers . ’
7 Order your new fire now with our easy payment terms ( APR 30% ) and if you settle the full cash price within 12 months , you 'll have absolutely no interest to pay .
8 But whoever it is , there 's no doubt they 'll have quite a job on their hands .
9 We could be in for some dramatic sea level changes because of climatic change ; volcanic action could have quite a bearing on that .
10 ‘ With four players you could have quite a battle in the middle of the board . ’
11 I 'd have though the tulip in the coal scuttle , the tulips in the cauldron , I thought they 'd had it , they were lying down completely
12 We realise that your trainees may have neither the time nor the academic background to deal with the complexities of a new language .
13 Go to a golf club you may have just the golf secretary .
14 Serial music may be written in various idioms , some of which may have virtually no melody at all .
15 You know , particularly , you know the female may have only a state pension you know the part state pension nothing else coming in , and a lot of these accounts are still net , not gross , so the revenue have got money to give away , and they 're quite happy to do that providi providing that people tap them on the shoulder .
16 I used to have quite a complex about being beaten , but I met Liz after I 'd been beaten hollow all year and she still married me . ’
17 So w did you used to have quite a lot of customers who came up from th from there
18 The lobbyists argued that if bureaucrats ran the regional pools , they would have neither the incentive nor the ability to negotiate the best possible deal .
19 Moreover it is unlikely that respondents would have either the time or experience to make a thorough appraisal of the information presented in the leaflet .
20 Usually the statute would provide only limited guidance on the question of genuine grievance , and the court would have quite a bit of freedom in deciding which grievances were genuine .
21 Now obviously if Isobel did that , she could write some notes in a form that was actually readable for you so that you could actually I mean I know the discussion would be more difficult but you would have quite a lot of information from her to go on .
22 So I think the government would have quite a task on it 's hands .
23 One would have though a lesson would have been learnt from the community charge fiasco .
24 ‘ Counterfeiting techniques have become highly sophisticated and in many cases the packaging has been copied to the finest degree so that the ordinary consumer would have absolutely no idea , from the outside , that they were n't buying the genuine article , ’ explains Mike Wadsley .
25 We would have absolutely no defence against it . ’
26 If I had n't insisted on you going along on the drop we would have absolutely no proof that it had ever taken place !
27 Racal 's share price suddenly shot up by almost a third , despite the fact that the partial flotation would have absolutely no effect on the already-excellent prospects for Vodafone .
28 The time recorded on two different watches , for example , can be perfectly associated : the time on one of them can be correctly predicted from the time on the other , but not because the time on one of them causes the time on the other ; altering the time on one of them would have absolutely no impact on the other .
29 This discussion is then broadened into an analysis of contingency or situational factors which will have both a general and a specific impact on individual company purchasing .
30 The person who has sold to you must remain satisfied , because a month will pass , then two , then three , and he will have neither the money nor the thing , but you will still have the thing .
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