Example sentences of "have [to-vb] the [adj] [adj] " in BNC.
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1 | That uncertainty will mean that the City of London will lose any aspirations that it has to accommodate the central European bank . |
2 | In addition to bringing down interest rates by another two per cent , he has to establish the right monetary policy after sticking to the wrong one for two years . |
3 | At present , a council has to set the same standard charge for all unoccupied second homes . |
4 | Against this undoubted benefit one has to set the likely bad consequences of recognizing the general and unqualified validity of consent to political authority . |
5 | try " filling in the blank " and " choosing the right form " exercises , e.g. in which the student has to choose the right plural endings for different noun classes . |
6 | The Theory of Everything ( TOE ) has to combine the four fundamental forces of nature , the strong and weak nuclear forces , electromagnetism and gravity , and use them to explain how the Universe , space and time could come into existence without recourse to divine intervention . |
7 | This priming often has to last the entire remaining 51 weeks . |
8 | But any approach to seeking more economic choice of credit by consumers ( probably from a wide range of competing options ) has to recognise the recurring weekly caller 's collection round as an obstacle . |
9 | Thus the Commission has to determine the relevant geographic market . |
10 | The professional clairvoyant also has to ignore the many scriptural bans on fortune-telling ( 1 Samuel 28:3 ; 2 Kings 21:6 ; Isaiah 8:19,20 ; Daniel 2:2 and others ) . |
11 | Now consider the effect of applying a load torque equal to the pull-out value , so that the motor has to produce the maximum available torque . |
12 | So alone and unroped he must have had to tackle the daunting vertical crack above , knowing he was fully committed . |
13 | Organic chemists had been troubled and had had to overcome the same semantic problems a century earlier ( see Chapter 2 ) . |
14 | To be certain he would have to search the entire National Trust site . |
15 | To select the preferred party we will need final offer prices , terms and conditions which will mean having to provide the short listed parties with the further information necessary for them to make a firm offer . |
16 | These Regulations , which came into force on 31 December 1992 , allow dormant companies that do not want to appoint auditors to use the written resolution procedure instead of having to pass the necessary special resolution in general meeting . |
17 | It is expected that the price tag will have to exceed the previous local record of £32,000 , paid by Glenavon to Coleraine for Raymond McCoy two years ago , if Campbell is to join the limited band of players that have made the move from The Oval to Windsor Park . |
18 | The register is in the form of a file and the person seeking registration does not have to submit the original charging documents . |
19 | To start with , Mercury One-2-One , which launches in the summer with a big pitch to the mass market planned to start in the autumn , will be limited to the south east , but ‘ someone who is regularly out of London will have to use the existing cellular network , so cellular will always be able to charge a premium for that . ’ |
20 | ‘ And Gabby turned out to be particularly good , which saved him from having to do the usual terrible , crap jobs that the Hawaiians had to do , and he ended up playing for a living in just about every joint in Hawaii — and there were lots of them in those days , because live music was a big thing . |
21 | If we have to criticize the Gesell studies because they were too unscientific , we will have to criticize the monumental National Child Development Study because it is too scientific . |
22 | For them to give you the service you want they need to know about your ideas and any suggestions and comments you may have to ensure the best possible service . |
23 | It was a dead time of day in Loxford , with only a handful of people out in their gardens — she would have to have the usual shouted conversation with Mr Biddle among his brassica stumps , and a whispered one with Mrs Eddoes , who treated life as a giant conspiracy — and nobody in the shop or on the green . |
24 | Investors there would nevertheless be permitted to write off against tax 50 per cent of costs entailed in a one-year period , while employees there would have their tax allowances increased , and companies would not have to pay the same local property and capital taxes as in western Germany . |
25 | ‘ I suppose he did n't have to face the same fierce bowling that we get today — I mean , West Indies and all that ? ’ commented Mis Mack 's Solicitor innocently . |
26 | A local authority may still claim privilege against disclosure in these circumstances and the court will then have to balance the two competing public interests as in Re M. ( c ) Privilege against incrimination Another form of privilege which may be claimed by a witness is the privilege against incrimination of self or spouse . |
27 | Anyone having to pay the full personal Community Charge can claim community charge benefit . |
28 | In other words , to obtain an initial fair comparison we would have to multiply the industrial related deaths by at least a factor of two and compare that figure with the number of recorded homicide cases . |
29 | The southern States , plus Texas , New Mexico and Arizona , would have to make the largest positive adjustments ( i.e. the largest increases in payments ) , whereas a number of northern State governments would have to reduce their levels . |
30 | I did n't want to have to negotiate the steep north-side paths in darkness . |