Example sentences of "[vb mod] have [verb] [subord] [noun] " in BNC.

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1 But suddenly Northern Ireland began to lose their grip as the Albanians came forward and captain Sulyman Demmollari should have scored when goalkeeper Tommy Wright missed a cross .
2 she said I should have waited until Val had worked had worked
3 ( Peter should have remembered because Howley sent him a six word telegram before his own big day .
4 Displays of early surgical instruments give a chilling glimpse of the pain the sick must have endured before anaesthetic was invented .
5 If advertising is as old as the first caveman who scrawled " Bonzo is the greatest Caveman " across a cave wall , then public relations must have started before Mankind learned to write .
6 They must have known if proceedings were taken for penalties it would be open to them in such proceedings to raise the question as to whether the duties were payable or not , as they did , in fact , in 1906 .
7 Middlesbrough deserved their win after leading for a long spell , though manager Lennie Lawrence 's heart must have sank when Tranmere snatched an 86th-minute equaliser .
8 It might 've helped if Ivor had bothered to be here . ’
9 I 'll have to see if dad 's around .
10 Well you 'll have to wait till Aaron comes out then
11 We 'll have to wait until Jackie comes back . ’
12 I 'll have to wait until Bluebeard 's in a mellow mood and tell him the truth .
13 Would he reappear perhaps like Edwin Drood himself might have done if Mr Dickens had been spared long enough to conclude it ?
14 " I might have done if Dr. Mac was still there .
15 We might highlight the ‘ topicality ’ or ‘ relevance ’ of J's first contribution by asking how K might have reacted if J had talked about one of his brothers , or about the type of work to be had in Australia , or training to be a brain surgeon .
16 Since most of the prostatic cancers detected in this study had not metastasised to bone and were well or moderately well differentiated these patients might have suffered if detection had been delayed .
17 In the steep-sloped area , a situation might have developed where overgrazing and deforestation occurred as a result of onerous taxation and loss of land to colonisers , leading to virtual environmental collapse .
18 On yet another impulse , she stopped to have a quick look , because it just might have mentioned where Slane was , might n't it ?
19 Charles shivered as he thought what might have happened if Jacqui had been in the flat when her ‘ visitors ’ called that morning .
20 Afterwards , she was to wonder what might have happened if Mr Sands 's grand party had not turned up .
21 Nick might have laughed when Mr Gillman told him " I did n't know she was married " or even , " Married , is she ?
22 The contrast between what one might have expected if changes in line with public choice theory were being implemented and what has actually happened can be illustrated still more clearly by looking rather more closely at particular service areas .
23 In its first twenty or thirty years of life the new Board was rather more active than the Lords of Trade ; between 1720 and 1760 effective executive power passed to the Secretary of State in charge of relations with France and southern Europe , though the Board still served as the main clearing house for the American pressure groups which could keep up London connections ; in the last twenty years of its life , when Gibbon was a member , it was as complete a sinecure as he could have wished because power had now passed to the holder of a new Secretaryship of State .
24 I reckoned that the marriage could have worked if Diana was 30 and Charles 43 .
25 No possible confusion of identities could have occurred since Lady Tynte was able to recognize her favourite by the nobs on its toes , which were unaffected by its change in appearance ( Hunter , 1837 ) .
26 ‘ Jealous , were you ? ’ he asked softly , and Claudia could have screamed as heat rose to her face .
27 ‘ No , of course there has n't , I 'd have known if Dana had been hurt in any way .
28 Judge Starforth Hill told the jurors they 'd have to consider whether Mrs Jones gave the impression of a schemeing woman , could she play the part , the charde of going to the police , her neighbour and then lying on oath in court .
29 A WARNING has been given that some council buildings in Clwyd may have to close if maintenance is not carried out .
30 Some local societies which had previously formed branches of that organisation may have survived as benefit clubs but nothing of substance is known about these , nor about such non-affiliated organisations as the Liverpool based British Mariner 's Association which in 1857 was to be found at 6 , Columbian Buildings at that port .
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