Example sentences of "[noun pl] [verb] always [vb pp] [to-vb] " in BNC.

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1 The surety would have to look after himself or herself , as most sureties have always had to do .
2 It is the particular genius of British politics that the major parties have always managed to hold on to their respective extremists and so to draw their teeth .
3 Your Mahler performances have always seemed to carry a starker , more purely tragic message .
4 His success could thus be explicitly attributed to that capacity for influence which British administrators had always claimed to possess , but had not normally had the opportunity of conclusively demonstrating .
5 Runaways from these plantations have always tried to reach Saigon because it is the nearest big city .
6 His parents have always refused to co-operate or even to discuss the boy . ’
7 The Conservatives have always had to tackle this particular problem by tying care in with action and results .
8 The challengers have always had to go to their side of the Atlantic now its their turn to come to Europe . ’
9 ‘ The challengers have always had to go to the other side of the Atlantic now it 's their turn to come to England .
10 ‘ The challengers have always had to go to the other side of the Atlantic now it 's their turn to come to England .
11 Professionals and businesses that stand in fiduciary relationships with their customers have always had to cope with the problems that arise when they owe conflicting duties to different clients , or their own interests conflict with those of a client .
12 I pointed out that in practice determinist theories have always had to acknowledge a low level of predictive power for their causal variables .
13 General practitioners have always had to manage and plan their businesses and are constantly adapting to changes in medical care .
14 THE LOCAL environment of the Arabian peninsula makes large-scale agricultural exploitation difficult , so the inhabitants have always had to capitalise on foreign demand for available resources .
15 Other magazines have always tried to copy ZZAP ! but have never quite cut the mustard .
16 The medical and scientific director , Dr Peter Davey , said : ‘ Doctors have always had to make value judgments in their diagnoses and that is something that is never going to change .
17 Writing in the influential Police Review magazine , Mr Roach , head of policing for north-west London and a member of the Association of Chief Police Officers , said that , since the time of Sir Robert Peel , the police had always had to reassure the public that their powers and privileges would not be misused .
18 Our ancestors have always needed to take decisions involving risks and probabilities , and natural selection has therefore equipped our brains to assess probabilities against a background of the short lifetime that we can , in any case , expect .
19 As Norton Taylor points out , ‘ administrations have always attempted to present their policies in the best possible light ; to avoid public relations pitfalls ; to coordinate information policy ; and to counter bad news they can do little about … ’ .
20 British filmmakers have always needed to face two ways , inwards towards the hopes and fears of the native audience to which they must address their pictures , and out to a broader , international public .
21 The government believes that people will love it for abolishing counties like Humberside , which proud Yorkshiremen have always refused to acknowledge .
22 Most of the benefits of such investment by urban based business or financial institutions have always tended to accrue to the more advantaged economic sectors .
23 Although Compaq has long-favoured the SCO brand of Unix on its machines — the two have an existing joint integration agreement — resellers have always had to go to SCO for product .
24 The courts have always refused to consider whether these procedures have been complied with .
25 I should make clear that this analysis is not predicated upon the assumption that the courts have always attempted to apply the jurisdictional/non-jurisdictional distinction according to some logical criteria .
26 But while the audience can relax in relative comfort in the mini auditorium which seats 200 , staff and performers have always had to work in rather cramped conditions in tiny dressing-rooms and offices that still have the old wall-paper on the bedroom walls .
27 In effect , despite their questioning of the assumptions of realism , and despite their awareness of the enormity of the task confronted by the writer , Spanish America 's new novelists still aspire , by and large , to do what novelists have always sought to do , namely , to depict the world in which they live .
28 When dealing with previous Bills affecting the armed services , the Minister and his colleagues have always sought to assure me that the armed forces are keenly aware of the need to treat complainers — irrespective of age — in a sympathetic manner .
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