Example sentences of "[vb mod] have [to-vb] to [noun sg] " in BNC.
Next pageNo | Sentence |
---|---|
1 | Many thought it a cruel injustice that Julian should have to go to prison at all . |
2 | Now then we 'll have to go to Nana 's in about ten minutes Katie . |
3 | ( Dolefully ) I suppose we 'll have to go to sleep . |
4 | ‘ You 'll have to go to school . |
5 | I would n't even go to limbo , Bernard , because I know about Him and have n't converted : I 'll have to go to hell . |
6 | She 'll have to go to town near Dudley . |
7 | You 'll have to write to Lady Anyone else wish to comment on |
8 | ‘ I might have to go to court . ’ |
9 | There were also two great monarchies , Austria-Hungary and the Ottoman Empire , which , whatever concessions they might have to make to nationality in practice , could not accept that statehood went with nationhood . |
10 | If Dulac 's version of the interview is to be believed , de Gaulle acknowledged the possibility that he might have to come to power after a military operation against Paris . |
11 | I 'd have to go to Parliament and bribe them to pass a law specially for my divorce . ’ |
12 | Those books Thérèse read too but pretended she did n't because then she 'd have to go to confession about them and spell out exactly what she 'd thought . |
13 | And if you were on night duty you 'd get two nights off , but when you came back you 'd , you 'd , you 'd have to be on duty that night so you 'd have to go to bed that day . |
14 | Nine o'clock and I 'd have to go to bed ! |
15 | And we did n't We had n't got a wash-house of our own , we used to have to go to Miss 's , down the road , to do our washing . |
16 | I know we used to have to run to school in the morn er for the shopping in the morning . |
17 | Although Charles 's own personal inclination was to refound a wide , comprehensive church able to encompass as many of the various denominations of the 1650s as possible , it was soon clear that the king would have to bow to pressure from the bishops , the conservative landowners , and their representatives in the Cavalier Parliament , who wished to see a more narrow restoration . |
18 | In many cases , in order to obtain a loan , the women would have to go to bed with one of the supervisors or the boss . |
19 | He did not expect that he would have to go to war over the Holy Places , but if he was called upon to do so , he thought that he could produce the men , guns and money he would need for victory . |
20 | In such a ‘ residential precinct ’ or ‘ Woonerf ’ , wheeled traffic would have to adapt to pedestrian behaviour : as Grotenhuis put it ‘ all traffic participants in a woonerf are considered equal , and … the pedestrian is a bit more equal than the others . ' ’ |
21 | Korda had seen that producers would have to look to television as an alternative source of revenue . |
22 | When explaining this matter to the House , I shall have to explain to Opposition Members how the European Community works . |
23 | Even if companies do not export their goods or services to other Member States , they will have to adapt to Community legislation , which will alter national law in virtually every area of economic activity ranging from standards , labelling , advertising , product liability , to domestic intellectual property and company law . |
24 | Mark Garner , executive consultant with Red Hot Television 's parent company , Continental Television , said : ‘ We are delighted this will have to go to court and we will be there at the earliest opportunity . ’ |
25 | He is not easy at the hostel and it is possible that he will have to return to hospital , but at the moment he is not certifiable . ’ |
26 | And he is convinced the temperamental Frenchman — bought for £1.2 million — will have to conform to manager Alex Ferguson 's regime or else he will be dispensed with just as quickly as he was at Leeds and his other clubs . |
27 | If you have not kept up with the nursing journals or have been out of practice for a long time then you will have to trust to luck or the recommendations of others as to the relevance and value of any course you choose to attend . |