Example sentences of "have to give [adv] " in BNC.

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1 YOU DO N'T HAVE TO GIVE UP YOUR TIPPLE
2 For most cars you will have to give up the whole of your mobility supplement for the three year period .
3 ‘ If we did n't shoot them , ’ he says , ‘ then within two or three years they would be so out of hand that we 'd have to give up sheep farming . ’
4 ‘ IF WE DID N'T SHOOT FOXES , WITHIN TWO OR THREE YEARS , WE 'D HAVE TO GIVE UP SHEEP FARMING . ’
5 Viola would have to give up her career , of course — otherwise she would be coming home the same time as Gina , which would not do at all .
6 They do n't have to give up their best rooms and their freedom and not be mistress in their own house , and wait on people like that any more . ’
7 That 's something else you 'd have to give up if you got a job , is n't it ?
8 It 's hard work ; you 'll have to give up some of your weekends and you wo n't be paid , other than expenses !
9 Hill farming demands very hard work for marginal returns and were it not for government subsidies for hill sheep and cattle , many hill farmers would have to give up .
10 What do you have to give up to have it all ?
11 He was a brave goalkeeper and every Palace fan rued the day when it was announced that he would have to give up his career .
12 The bill also breaches the confidentiality enjoyed by many professions — notably lawyers , doctors and journalists — who do not usually have to give up their files to the police .
13 Moreover , as a result of the £500000 Oxford project , archaeologists will have to give up for dating only a tiny portion of their specimen , 1 milligram or less .
14 He believed that he would have to give up a career to which he was deeply committed and which had promised to be highly successful .
15 What might you have to give up ?
16 I know I 'm too thin , I do n't like what I look like and I 've been told if I lose any more weight I 'll have to give up work and be admitted to hospital .
17 But if women do want change , they may have to give up what they have invested in men — the idealisation which ( temporarily ) allows them to avoid uncomfortable things in themselves .
18 Because however much we might be reassured by Parliament that Charles 's constitutional position will be unaffected by his separation , most of us believe that the Prince will finally have to give up his right to the throne — just as his Great Uncle did in the Abdication of 1936 .
19 I 'll have to give up work to stay at home and look after him . ’
20 You may also have to give up bath oils and foams if they are irritating , and in fact showering rather than bathing could prove very helpful .
21 Now Marie may have to give up her job because Lucy 's gran can not travel to the new school .
22 It is likely that she will have to give up her employment to accompany her husband .
23 Everett argued that the Founders would have to give up some of their powers if NoS was going to attract any regular City investment .
24 Moreover , since immature goats are subordinate to older ones , they may well have to give up any patch of food they find to a larger , more dominant animal .
25 I may have to give up my job in order to finish it . ’
26 For as well as suggesting that if we were to give up the view that most actions are autonomous we should have to give up a great deal else as well , it asserts that this transformation of our attitudes is actually beyond us .
27 So if the two eat very much the same , but , for example , Ann had always had a small packet of peanuts with her evening drink , then she will have to give up those peanuts permanently to stay slim for ever .
28 If Richard insisted on keeping Aquitaine , would he have to give up his claim to inherit the rest ?
29 ( For the present you may have to give up smoking , but that could be an excellent idea in itself ! )
30 I will just have to give up my daughter ! "
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