Example sentences of "[adv] have [adv] [verb] [noun] " in BNC.
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1 | You obviously have n't had time to look at these , and I just wanted to say one or two things |
2 | Richard had been rebuilding and strengthening Clairvaux and his motives for doing so have long puzzled historians , since it was a step which could be interpreted as an infringement of his elder brother 's rights . |
3 | ‘ I just have n't got time for you , do you understand ? ’ |
4 | There 's been so much on this week I just have n't had time to get the details of the contract finalised . ’ |
5 | There 's a fair selection in the Windows range , including some packages we just have n't had time to look at . |
6 | Some of the farms put under restrictions yesterday have already supplied milk for public consumption , but officials were confident there had been no threat to health . |
7 | Democratic nations , whether they have governments of the right or left , usually have well articulated policies towards intervention in private industry . |
8 | In British higher education the precision with which goals are stated is usually inversely related to their institutional generality ; thus course and grassroots teaching teams usually have clearly articulated goals ; faculty goals are often pious but hopelessly vague ; institutional goals are rarely stated and are never sufficiently defined to be operationalizable . |
9 | Apart from quartz and the feldspars , most minerals are dark in colour , so basic rocks with no quartz tend to be dark-coloured , while acid rocks are much lighter and usually have only isolated specks of dark minerals . |
10 | I still have not forgiven Jack or the IAC . |
11 | But they still have n't kept pace with the population even though it is slowing down now . |
12 | I still have n't found time to take a proper walk over there , ’ she added , indicating the expanse of formal parkland stretching out below them . |
13 | ‘ You get made fun of really if other boys think you still have n't had sex . |
14 | Well we still have n't got one , I know we 've got the Kit-Kats , but we still have n't got bits to pick have we ? |
15 | We conclude that intact HSV-1 Vmw175 and its isolated DNA binding domain both have greatly reduced affinities for the VT2 binding sites in the VZV gene 62 promoter , compared to the binding observed with the VZV 140k DNA binding domain . |
16 | It starts with the assumption that you probably have n't got time to analyse your use of time ! |
17 | Banks and Building Societies also have geographically based structures . |
18 | This is particularly true of the woodland areas which are freely open to the public and which often have well marked nature trails to follow . |
19 | GRAMMATICAL WORDS typically have very specialised meanings and can be particularly difficult for non-native speakers to learn . |
20 | The boy answered , ‘ No sir , I really have n't had time because I 've been so busy working . ’ |
21 | ‘ No — I really have n't had time . ’ |
22 | Essex News , I really have n't had time to look through it erm , but there 's rather a nice little bit which I must read . |
23 | And erm Edward Hyde wrote an elegiac mourning comment on this , which we really have n't got time for unfortunately . |
24 | Flying forwards is exactly the same as hovering in a wind except that you now have consciously to do things which you probably did automatically in the hover . |
25 | He made the point that enthusiasts , such as himself , whose principal interest was working main line steam , now have very limited scope in this Country and have to look increasingly to far off under-developed countries for this form of traction . |
26 | Most supermarkets now have organically produced fruits and vegetables for sale and the increasing choice of varieties available reflects the public 's growing interest in these products . |
27 | Thanks to the recent statistical work of demographic historians we now have quite detailed information on with whom the old lived in England from early modern times onwards . |
28 | With recent advances in technology , even personal computers now have much increased memory capacity , so a lexical look-up technique which uses a large vocabulary ( say , anything over 20,000 words ) is now feasible . |
29 | According to an NFU spokesman , the legislation reflects local bye-laws and incorporates much of the unions ' own code of practice , which until now have together governed straw and stubble burning . |
30 | ‘ I simply have n't got time to spend hours slaving over a hot stove — I 'd rather be out playing with the children or getting out and about , but I do try to make sure we eat well . ’ |