Example sentences of "[prep] [noun sg] [pron] [vb mod] have " in BNC.

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1 Pausanias thought Myrtilos was under the heads of Oenomaus 's horses , but since he certainly took the girl for male he may have meant her .
2 However , it is only one example of a more general situation — for instance one might have no temperature variations but two different solutes — and the usual name now is double diffusive convection .
3 If Microsoft is found to have a case to answer , the minimum possibility is that the company is forced to sign a consent decree under which it has to unbundle , and agree not to bundle in future — for instance it might have to dismantle Windows for Workgroups and sell the networking elements as a separate product ( similar networking code will be an integral part of standard Windows NT ) ; at worst , the company could be forced to split itself into two completely different companies , one for operating systems and languages , the other for applications .
4 So for instance you may have already have a relational database management system , it may or may not be , but that information exists as a service or service provided on the network .
5 So for instance you may have real-time .
6 so that for instance you can have four stops on one keyboard , three on another and the three sounds that are available on this keyboard are available from those , the four sounds that are available
7 For instance he would have to pay the equivalent of the rent during the period of his occupation between the date of the order and the date of giving up possession .
8 Boswell argues back that ‘ A man , as a machine , may have agreeable sensations ; for instance he may have pleasure in music . ’
9 If an estate agent is convicted under the act the client does not automatically have a right of action in civil proceedings for loss which may have been brought about as a result of the offence .
10 But if you were arrested for murder they would have to be very careful not to blow their cover .
11 The alternative was either not to commence running the business or to cease running the business shortly after completion which would have meant in either case that the landlord would foreclose on the lease and the plaintiff 's investment in the business would have been entirely lost .
12 They were told by John Gilchrist , the new chief executive of the revamped company Leyland Trucks Manufacturing Limited : ‘ Day after day we will have to rebuild our volume and productivity levels . ’
13 Dinner in the superb restaurant will be provided and after breakfast you will have time to explore the area which is in the Muscadet region .
14 After breakfast you 'd have until 8.25 to make your bed again , tidy your space and make sure it was absolutely immaculate .
15 It would provide the people of Scotland with at least the hope that after privatisation they will have decent bus services .
16 no , if it if it stays dry after dinner you can have the cars and bikes out
17 Here are a few myths about exercise you might have believed in :
18 Two last points : firstly , during lunch you will have the chance to enjoy a play presented by a drama group from this college .
19 Whilst we did not expect the same standard of play we should have expected something better .
20 I did n't know what kind of play she might have been pulling .
21 Together with the right kind of support we could have fun together and achieve so much for ourselves and our diocese .
22 The complete absence of information makes it very difficult to uncover the processes of change which may have been at work among the peoples north and south of the Trent during the reign of Eadwine , but it is inconceivable that Eadwine was able to extend his hegemony southwards without first achieving domination of the Mercians .
23 ‘ And in that sort of story it 'd have to be their own fault . ’
24 Alan was the sort of driver who would have gone out on an ice-skating rink .
25 At such moments participants find their ‘ public ’ voice and do not need the kind of protection they may have relied on earlier .
26 Sight down the neck again , and with a bit of luck it should have moved to form a ‘ crown ’ or hump .
27 ‘ We are looking for members of the Asian community who can provide memories of when they first came into the area , how they got employment , how the locals opened up to them , their first impressions of Britain and the problems of racism they may have encountered . ’
28 Later in the year , fund-raisers at the college are also hoping to buy two emergency bakeries from the Ministry of Defence which would have fed Britain after a nuclear attack .
29 Such an interpretation of the law of karma which may have satisfied orthodox Hindus is rejected by Gandhi out of hand , for he finds it inconceivable to divorce morality from religion .
30 However , his relations with his tenants were never happy , because while Lowther believed his town and harbour should be developed largely at the expense of the inhabitants , with modest financial encouragement from himself , he could never bring himself to make those concessions of self-government which might have persuaded his tenants to co-operate .
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