Example sentences of "[pers pn] have for some [noun sg] " in BNC.

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1 I had for some time been interested in the work of the 17th century Dutch and Spanish still-life school of painting .
2 My doctor had also prepared a report for the judge , about various medical problems which I hoped might be taken into consideration , along with the fact that I had for some time been re-building my life and now had very little to do with the lifestyle that brought me into contact with drugs .
3 I had for some reason gone up to M. Dupont 's room and was about to knock , but before doing so , as is my custom , I paused for a second to listen at the door .
4 I have for some time studied the prospects for the privatisation of British Rail .
5 I have for some reason a picture of a rather youthful military historian .
6 She was sitting back relaxedly and looking more contented than she had for some time .
7 It was above all the place to which you were advised to go if you had for some reason been shot , in either war or peace .
8 ‘ Well , anyhow , ’ she went on , as she fumbled for the matches and lit the gas lights , ‘ we 'll have Christmas together in peace , and — and in case it 's the last we have for some time , we 'll make it as nice as possible .
9 It has for some time been considered a most urgent need to extricate mentally handicapped children from long-stay hospitals and stop their admission to them , and there has , as a result , been a sharp fall in the numbers of mentally handicapped children in hospitals .
10 By far the most popular location in recent years has been the Netherlands , for the very good reason that it has for some time offered by far the best deal .
11 The twentieth century has seen the growth of a considerable literature on management as an acquired skill and it has for some time been possible to obtain academic management qualifications .
12 The issue of conscription was a particularly tender one for the union , for it had for some time been under pressure from the Admiralty over breaches of the obligation of seamen , nominally enforced by the Board of Trade , that sailors should be on board their ships on time and hence not delay sailings .
13 To such an end it had for some time been seeking to intensify contacts with both Tehran and Baghdad .
14 He had for some time , in the instinctive darkness of his mind in which so many heterogeneous problems were circulating , been wondering how , in what undramatic , as it were casual , not yet significant context he might utter them .
15 R. A. Butler , one of the Conservative Party 's chief spokesmen on foreign affairs , stated in the House of Commons on 27 February 1947 that he had for some time regarded Korea ‘ as perhaps the greatest danger spot for peace in the Far East ’ .
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