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

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1 ‘ Someone always has to pick up the bill . ’
2 What I , I intend to do is to , I think it would be unfortunate if , as the result of a major development which is actually funding this new junction , the County Council then has to pick up the bill for other ameliorating effects a little bit further on the network .
3 However , she just has to pick up the phone and a friendly voice at The Wool Shop is always there to help .
4 God , it 's simple to understand , a child could do it , but old Mike has to put up a resistance to everything .
5 If there is a public inquiry the council has to put up a site notice .
6 He has to weigh up the possibility of a conviction for something , as opposed to the accused walking free .
7 It would require two million for the costs to be covered , so the Spanish government has to make up the shortfall .
8 ‘ The county council has to make up the remainder but it has already limited the amount it intends to spend . ’
9 So the state has no had to tighten up the law to cut the cost .
10 I have had to pull up the Minister when he has visited Teesside and talked about companies in Tyneside which are of no interest to people on Teesside .
11 Due to the printing and publishing costs , we 've had to put up the price of your BROWNIE magazine .
12 The bus , therefore , no longer goes along Summerfield terrace , with the result that 50 old-age pensioners have had to draw up a petition to try to persuade the public transport company to reinstate the two-way pattern .
13 Of late , my generation has perforce had to count up the debit column of all those mistakes , and in so doing has forgotten the benefits .
14 He was almost blue with cold , having had to scramble up an iceberg , loaded with a hundred pounds of scuba gear , and then left for long minutes all by himself .
15 As it turned out , George had not had to stir up the matter of Miss Tuckey himself .
16 Breakfast Car will probably have to go up a grade and go to slightly posher places . ’
17 An EC life insurer can now provide insurance in other member states without having to set up a branch or agency in those other states , according to the Insurance Companies ( Amendment ) Regulations 1993 which came into force on 20 May 1993 , giving effect to the Second Life Insurance Directive ( 90/619/EEC ) of 8 November 1990 .
18 While chatting with Allan in the Admin Block corridor about a snag which had emerged , one of the senior managers said ‘ We 'll have to set up an Improvement Team to solve it ’ .
19 He may even have to set up the maul before he hits the tackler .
20 He 's having to pick up the equivalent of
21 He has also failed to recognise that the Welsh people will have to pick up the bill for his spending policies .
22 It fears that universities will have to pick up the tab , and it draws a sharp distinction between those who will be non-payers and those who will get 25 per cent .
23 DOG owners in Cleveland have been warned they will have to pick up the tab if their pets go walkabout .
24 He would have to dredge up an interest in his least favourite pupils and submit himself to a barrage of child-obsessed monologues from people he barely remembered from the year before .
25 But perhaps you 'll have to grow up a bit more before you realise that . ’
26 A party , can present a list without having to put up a candidate in every or indeed in any constituency .
27 So er , at the moment they 're saying all I can see is that er , we would have to use up the whole of our balance , that 's sixteen thousand and the twenty four thousand arrears .
28 It may be that the England management themselves will have to draw up a code of conduct in order to keep everyone happy .
29 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 .
30 For most cars you will have to give up the whole of your mobility supplement for the three year period .
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