Example sentences of "[noun prp] [vb mod] have have [noun] " in BNC.
Next pageNo | Sentence |
---|---|
1 | Jim must have had trouble . |
2 | This was partly because its proposals would have put an end to the prospect of the very benefits that securitisation should bring ( because the Bank of England would have had difficulty in applying its own regulations for securitisation ) , and partly because the accounting treatment proposed seemed to us inconsistent . |
3 | Eva would have had difficulty holding the reins , even for such a short time , without wanting to give them a short , sharp jerk occasionally . |
4 | ‘ Liawski must have had papers , notes , things like that about the project , ’ Reynolds said . |
5 | Himself apart , Waugh may have had Anthony Powell and L. P. Hartley in mind , those careful craftsmen of post-war fiction . |
6 | A key figure for this last task was the archbishop of Canterbury , but not all were as reliable or as effective on the king 's behalf as Sudbury proved to be : Islip ( 1349–66 ) had not secured the sexennial grant requested in 1356 , although probably even Sudbury would have had problems with such an extreme proposal ; and after Sudbury , Courtenay ( 1381–96 ) was not always obliging . |
7 | To which the girl Nona might have had access . ’ |
8 | Of course , George may have had jet lag . |
9 | Ken Veysey must have had nightmares about this on Saturday night . |
10 | It is not surprising that in the mid-fourth century the shape of the Pyramids should have influenced the architecture of an otherwise Greek building like the Mausoleum at Halikarnassus ; or that the cult of the Egyptian Isis should have had worshippers at fourth-century Athens ( Tod 189 , line 44 and p. 178 ) . |
11 | ‘ We have got another 48 hours before we leave and John could have had treatment here , but Liverpool are ruling him out . |
12 | Sarah and Terry had no alternative but she and John could have had months of courtship before he went away if it had not been for his stubbornness . |
13 | Moran is well-known , nor to say infamous , for outrageous avant-garde works such as an opera scored for 11 dogs , and another one about fascism in which the arriving audience in Frankfurt would have had numbers stamped on its arms , à la Auschwitz , if the piece had not been cancelled . |