Example sentences of "[adv] have [verb] for [noun] " in BNC.
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1 | However , due to insufficient financing , we not only had to ask for benefits , but also can not take on ourselves new obligations , as was done by the rest of the participants in the protocol . " |
2 | The theme that the right alone had espoused for years — German unification — had overnight become official state policy , leaving the extreme right temporarily disarmed . |
3 | Consider , then , what geography and generation together have done for Darwin 's understanding of the problems of organic diversity and the origin of species . |
4 | USERS ONLY HAVE TO RE-CODE FOR PROGRESS 7 GRAPHICS ENHANCEMENTS — OBJECT LINK EXPECTED IN JUNE |
5 | ‘ I 've just had to walk for miles , ’ she said , flopping down into an armchair . |
6 | Okay now at this stage you do n't normally have to ask for volunteers for the first group because it usually sort of role then off they go . |
7 | The intention had been to give the premiere of Sea Change at Sadler 's Wells to open the Theatre Ballet 's new season there , but it was thought that by then John would already have left for New York to take part in the Sadler 's Wells Ballet 's first American tour , so the decision was made to present the ballet first on 18 July 1949 at the Gaiety Theatre , Dublin , where the company concluded its summer tour . |
8 | ‘ I 'll just have to wait for Dad then , wo n't I ? ’ |
9 | That tooth will just have to wait for California , along with everything else . |
10 | It is unlikely to have been the work of Asclepiodatus , who can scarcely have worked for Chlothar before 613 , given his association with Childebert II , and is equally unlikely to have been active after that date . |
11 | The resolution was repealed on Oct. 21 , although some Chechen families were said already to have left for Grozny ( capital of Chechnia ) . |
12 | ‘ How ? ’ she just had to ask for clarification . |
13 | She somehow had to fumble for words to keep up her own façade of blithe sophistication . |
14 | I look at r.s.s. every Saturday from about noon local time ( 5.00 pm Leeds time ) in the hope of getting the results asap and I normally have to wait for ages until info arrives . |
15 | Youth itself was hardly a disadvantage , in an age when people were ruling kingdoms and leading armies in their teens ; the Stewart kings themselves , all but one beginning his personal rule in his teens , two dead at thirty , and only one surviving beyond the age of forty , could hardly have waited for age and experience to bless their undertakings and achievements . |
16 | Having the conduct of the drafting of the agreement is a considerable advantage because points agreed in negotiation can be reflected in the document in the way in which the lawyers drafting it prefer , and it is the other party who is always having to ask for changes to the text . |
17 | Deep down , however , and reading his own comments about always having to fight for employment and never being superbly successful , one ca n't help feeling he actually yearned for the stability that steady and better paid work would bring . |
18 | By my first week in-country ( my third on mefloquine ) I had reduced sensation in my legs , was waking up with a start from severe nightmares which subjectively had lasted for hours ( in reality for only 15 min ) , and occasionally wondering what it would be like to jump the eight floors from my hotel room . |
19 | I remember in my early months , often being cornered by the other choir boys after service or practice and being asked to say the collect for the week , which we always had to learn for Sunday school . |
20 | Besides Oxford University , the side everyone wanted to avoid , Dick Clarke also has to prepare for confrontations with in-form Anchorians from Surrey and Essex rivals Crostyx . |
21 | , Jonathan ( 1690 ? –1747 ) , mathematical instrument-maker , born perhaps in 1690 , went to London from Lincolnshire and was established in a workshop on the corner of Beaufort Buildings in the Strand by 1722 , probably having worked for George Graham [ q.v. ] , with whom he remained on very close terms . |
22 | This must also have secured for Oswiu an important diplomatic contact with the Kentish court of King Eorcenberht ( 640–64 ) , son of Eadbald , and re-established the former relationship which had prevailed in the time of Eadwine and Eadbald . |
23 | Gould would also have angled for contacts who might help him with his prospective expedition . |
24 | In talks with both President François Mitterrand and Chancellor Helmut Kohl , Miyazawa was reported to have discussed economic and trade issues , but also to have appealed for support in Japan 's territorial dispute with Russia . |
25 | ‘ I would rather have played for Wales at Cardiff Arms Park than Hamlet at the Old Vic , ’ he said later . |
26 | As has been shown in detail elsewhere ( Hanko 1986 , 1987 , 1989 ) , knowledge that can highlight the underlying issues has to be supplemented , and skills have to be developed in the group , which the designated supporter will have been applying in his work with children , but now has to redeploy for work with fellow professionals . |
27 | In surgical wards you will often have to care for people who display anxiety . |
28 | Service trades offer the opportunity to create jobs quicker because they fulfil a requirement that already exists , rather than attempting to create a market for a new product and often having to wait for factories to be built and machinery installed . |
29 | However , Coun. Mrs Town said the time restrictions would seriously hamper disabled people who often had to wait for lifts into town . |
30 | A teacher from an urban school , discussing the reasons for a recent teachers ' strike , said that not only were salaries low when the amount of time worked outside classroom hours was taken into account , but also teachers often had to pay for classroom materials out of their own pockets , if they wanted to have any . |