Example sentences of "[pers pn] have here [art] [noun sg] " in BNC.

  Next page
No Sentence
1 I have here a bank-book , ’ he called , ‘ a current account .
2 I have here a guarantee from Adolf Hitler of peace in our time …
3 I have here a petition and I want you all to sign it to show those men in power that the women and children of this country think that slavery is wicked and wrong ! ’
4 I have here a petition with about 22,000 signatures , principally of visitors and the staff of the royal parks who are concerned about the proposed privatisation of those parks because they fear a consequent fall from the high standards established in them .
5 I have here a copy of ’ Roof tax v poll tax ’ , published by the Scottish Conservative party .
6 I have here a copy of the committee which was formed that night , and also a copy of the minutes , I 'll give each Councillor one , and then they can read it at their leisure , instead of me taking up the whole meeting .
7 I have here a letter from the chief magician , Mr Hellibore , who presides over the Hallowe'en festivities each year .
8 But I have here a list of names supplied to me by General Friant .
9 ‘ As a token of my regard for you , I have here a gift … ’
10 I have here a warrant for your arrest on suspicion of fraud . ’
11 I have here the report of the head of our security division . ‘
12 He says to himself , ‘ Thank goodness we have here a writer who understands our secret feelings . ’
13 There is certainly a difficulty in understanding how Israel can be expected to have known anything from primeval times , when it did not exist , but there is no doubt that we have here a parallelism of increasing precision .
14 Again we have here a variable which we can use to regulate individual needs if required , twelve shakes giving a slightly sharper daily rise in potency than eight .
15 I do not know if elegans shares the interesting ‘ primitive ’ features of livingstonii — it is certainly quite similar in appearance — but if it does then perhaps we have here a group of fish descended from ancestors which stopped off on the way to the rocks , and which did not need to evolve the specialisations needed in the more-densely populated and competitive atmosphere of the rocky zones .
16 Curiously , while ( 64 ) can only be used as a greeting ( at least in British English ) , ( 65 ) can only be used as a parting : ( 65 ) Good night so that we have here an interaction of time and discourse deixis .
17 It is possible that we have here an attempt to combine hunting and aquatic scenes ( see note 3 ) , but such a suggestion must be tentative .
18 We have here an example of the well known binomial distribution with .
  Next page