Example sentences of "have [to-vb] [noun sg] [prep] [noun sg] " in BNC.

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1 To get to the next section of footway the pedestrian has to risk death by collision in the road reserved for motoring , analogous to the castaway having to swim the shark-infested waters to reach the next island .
2 Anyone wanting to argue the importance of studying popular music has to absorb Adorno in order to go beyond him .
3 On first referral to the agency an elderly client has to provide evidence of need , by demonstrating some degree of incapacity to warrant receipt of a service .
4 But chemistry has to give way to physics .
5 Efficiency of operations has to give way to inventiveness and creativity .
6 The striking out is automatic as compared with Ord 13 , r 3(4) where the court has to give notice of intention to strike out where no action has been taken for 12 months .
7 The primer has to protect metal from corrosion and provide a bond for the top coat .
8 ‘ Obviously one has to welcome investment in road infrastructure , but at a time when there is no cash for new rolling stock or proper line maintenance , I find this very surprising . ’
9 I agree with you on his ambiguity and the danger of flirting with such issues — you 're not telling him what to write but , being an idol to many fans , he has to have sense of responsibility .
10 Either identical particles are fermions , which means that their wavefunction has to change sign under interchange , or they are bosons , in which case they have the even simpler property that their wavefunction is completely unaltered by an interchange .
11 So very sensibly , before admission one has to offer proof of understanding .
12 The only problem is , one of them 's still only thirteen and has to get time off school to play gigs .
13 Dr Davey said : ‘ Any health service with limited resources has to take economics into account in its health care decisions .
14 It is an argument not for training boards with a lot of bureaucracy , but for the present successful French policy where every employer has to spend money on training .
15 As Chairman of a multi-million pound Company , 38 year old Richard Gabriel from Gloucestershire has to spend alot of time at work .
16 When taking aim , the fish also has to make allowance for refraction — the bending of light as it travels from the air into the water .
17 In tiny flats and bedsitters it 's more often the living room that has to make space for dining , in which case it 's a good idea to separate the two functions with either a physical division — like an arch , trellis or shelving — or with visual treatment like different lighting or flooring , or perhaps a change of colour or mood created by wall coverings and soft furnishings .
18 ( 2 ) In an action for malicious falsehood the plaintiff has to prove malice as part of his cause of action ; this is not so in the case of defamation. ( 3 ) Damage is not presumed in the case of malicious falsehood as it is in libel .
19 Neil Kinnock former idealist who realised that he has to temper idealism with reality and also persuade his dyed in the wool colleagues that their ideas were out of date .
20 Freddie resolutely refused to rehearse with water because he would have had to drink glass after glass and , being a bitter expert , he refused to drink bottled beer .
21 If the monetary authorities of modern consumer societies have had to replace gold by paper in the course of inflation , they are still constrained at moments of crisis to shift ingots of gold from one bank to another , and the price of gold bullion on the exchange remains a sensitive index of confidence in the international market .
22 But they have increasingly had to cede ground to government and to ‘ administrators ’ over issues of policy and resource allocation .
23 I 've had to take time off work to get my ticket .
24 So today it was lessons at home for some of the class provided by parents who 'd had to take time off work .
25 The decision to purchase a microcomputer or to give advice on the purchase means that the school librarian and teachers will have to gather information in relation to the questions posed above on criteria for selection .
26 He would simply have to perform homage in person .
27 One meal a week with you and I wo n't even have to go cap in hand to Johnson 's store . ‘
28 The centres might have to go cap in hand to the Croydon college and the two sixth-form colleges in the borough asking their governing bodies to apply to the funding council for funds for vocational courses , in the hope that funds would be obtained on behalf of the adult education centres .
29 If we look at regional Governments across Europe that do n't have to go cap in hand every time to some deadbeat in White Hall , right , they go straight to Europe and they network across Europe and they exchange ideas and things happen .
30 They were shown to a little table , where they would have to sit side by side .
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