Example sentences of "[vb mod] have [to-vb] [adv prt] [prep] " in BNC.
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1 | That men should have to put up with such brutalizing conditions — ’ |
2 | She had suggested that I should go and fill it , but there had been ice and snow outside , and darkness , and to reach the coal I should have to climb down into the concrete bunker . |
3 | ‘ You 're wanted , Miss Kyte , ’ she said testily , ‘ and I do n't see why I should have to run around after you . |
4 | Everything else you 'll have to fix up for yourself . |
5 | Sex : The more you hold back , the more you 'll have to hold back from . |
6 | As for the future , well , I suppose I 'll have to move on at some time but for the moment I 'm quite happy at the theatre . |
7 | ‘ You 'll have to move in with me . ’ |
8 | Because when you do run across the road , you get to the other side , and you 're thinking , good gracious , that was a close shave , I 'll have to sit down for a minute , I think I 'll have a cup of coffee or something . |
9 | I 'm afraid you 'll have to wake up to the fact that that kind of man from that kind of a family would n't know the meaning of love . ’ |
10 | With an inconvenient house and stuck out on that headland with nothing to look at but a ruined abbey and that atomic power station they 'll have to put up with what they can get . ’ |
11 | ‘ Knocking Leeds United is n't exactly new , and now that we 're champions I suppose we 'll have to put up with it all the more . ’ |
12 | If we do n't specify the objectives we want , we 'll have to put up with those we get . " |
13 | ‘ You 'll have to put up with it , darling , ’ he said gaily , refusing to fall in with her mood . |
14 | ‘ Unfortunately , our sales manager , Mrs Everard , has contracted this flu bug that 's going round , so you 'll have to put up with me all today — and possibly tomorrow too , if she does n't regain her voice . ’ |
15 | Ian is going to the hospital , so I 'm afraid you 'll have to put up with me . ’ |
16 | Oh I 'll have to put up with it . |
17 | I 'll have to watch out with Robert and that lot because telling it to Mr , he 's worried , is it a story and all that lot . |
18 | You only have to sit in there and you hear the rumours and the gossip that 's going around and the thing is , in the staffroom it 's always the bad kids that are talked about , never the good ones , which I suppose makes sense in a way , but as a new teacher , you come in , you hear these rumours like , I used to hear rumours about Kevin ( an Afro-Caribbean pupil ) and I thought , ‘ Oh , God , I 'll have to watch out for Kevin , everybody thinks he 's a trouble-maker and that means he 's bound to be in my class ’ , but I mean it 's not as simple as that , it really is n't … |
19 | Of course , we 'll have to watch out for les flics . " |
20 | But I suppose we 'll have to hang on to them now until the owner gets back . ’ |
21 | We 'll have to hang on to that . |
22 | They 'll have to go up into the attic . |
23 | ‘ … someone 'll have to go up to Top Piece , too , and have a go at that wall . |
24 | She 's not been any more so I 'll have to go round to . |
25 | ‘ We 'll have to go back at once . ’ |
26 | I 'll have to go back to Glasgow and take up my life there again . ’ |
27 | ‘ I 'll have to go back to London and sort everything out , ’ she said shakily . |
28 | I 'll have to go back to the shop , and check up on them , as I said , hut I imagine you wo n't grudge me a glass of brandy first . " |
29 | ‘ Could n't we have a second chair ? ’ ventured John Gould , inciting the first major row : ‘ We 'll have to re-think the whole thing ’ says James ‘ we 'll have to go back to the very beginning and re-block it ! ’ |
30 | ‘ We 'll have to go back to London , ’ Keith says . |