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

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1 I once had to have a leg replaced when a couple of Hunters tore mine off .
2 I once had to have the gnomic response of one respected editor of a major journal interpreted for me by a senior colleague .
3 He taught me a lot and was also a good type of person for whom I always have had a very high regard .
4 I rudely announced to my wife Claudia that I simply had to have a baby by the time I was 35 .
5 I simply had to have a break .
6 I then had to have a hysterectomy .
7 The glass must have held nearly half a pint and I thought I too had had a splendid day out .
8 We we should discuss a bit about this document and I too have had the er dubious honour of reading John Major 's speech and it 's nice to see that both Tory speakers have actually managed to take half of it each and paraphrase it .
9 She only had to have the usual amount of arms and legs and to be able to see where she was going .
10 If you were asked which club it was , you just had to have a good reason for choosing it .
11 ‘ I think you just have to have a flexible mind , ’ said Masklin , knowing even as he said the words that this probably was n't going to be a lot of help .
12 You just have to have the wit , imagination and guts to go out and find it .
13 you know it 's not as if we 've got vast amounts of extra luggage if you go on holiday and if so you just have to have the roof rack on .
14 You just have to have an official order
15 And would you still have to have an insurance on top of that ?
16 But you see you still have to have a person there while we 're
17 ‘ Do you always have to have the last word ? ’
18 Because she was not moving at all , she developed a weeping wound in her leg one day , and the circulation collapsed to the extent that she nearly had to have the leg amputated .
19 You you both have to have a little ride each back to my house because I ca n't I do n't think
20 She really has had an awful lot of attention .
21 So you really have to have a sort of strong character and in you go .
22 ‘ My dear Shannon , for someone so pitifully characterless , you really have had the most fascinating life . ’
23 This woman was 37 years old , and she too had had a lumpectomy and radiotherapy four years earlier .
24 She too had had a call this day , and finally had told Mr Blaney in the shop that she was going , that she was unwell , could not go on .
25 ‘ I would hate it to go down in Conservative mythology that we always had to have a gaggle of young men running every campaign , ’ he said , ‘ although if we had the same bunch at the next election at least they 'd be a few years older . ’
26 And he always had a pot of linseed and black Spanish , and we always had to have a drink of this , cos he thought it was fantastic .
27 Yes , it 's , it 's possibly worth mentioning on that as well that , in comparison with the supply based , I mean the existing system is demand based , which is silly , because we have to have fire stations there even if they never go out , if they go out twice a year , we still have to have a fire station in loco , but with the demand based model that 's illustrated in A C C based initiative , it 's based on existing supply , and this authority has a fairly frugal level of supply in comparison with some other authorities , so what happens is that if you apply it to existing supply then we come out quite badly .
28 It is either going to be physically rationed or price rationed … prices are too low anyway , since we still have to have an operating subsidy , and that is not in line with the long-term political trend … ’
29 I myself did not know anything about this and having checked with Gillyan Ford and all Publicity Assistants , found that they too had had no previous indication of the requirement to scan adverts .
30 It obviously has had the opposite effect …
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