Example sentences of "have [to-vb] up the [noun sg] " in BNC.
Next pageNo | Sentence |
---|---|
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 | He has to weigh up the possibility of a conviction for something , as opposed to the accused walking free . |
5 | It would require two million for the costs to be covered , so the Spanish government has to make up the shortfall . |
6 | ‘ The county council has to make up the remainder but it has already limited the amount it intends to spend . ’ |
7 | So the state has no had to tighten up the law to cut the cost . |
8 | 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 . |
9 | Due to the printing and publishing costs , we 've had to put up the price of your BROWNIE magazine . |
10 | 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 . |
11 | As it turned out , George had not had to stir up the matter of Miss Tuckey himself . |
12 | He may even have to set up the maul before he hits the tackler . |
13 | He 's having to pick up the equivalent of |
14 | He has also failed to recognise that the Welsh people will have to pick up the bill for his spending policies . |
15 | 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 . |
16 | DOG owners in Cleveland have been warned they will have to pick up the tab if their pets go walkabout . |
17 | 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 . |
18 | For most cars you will have to give up the whole of your mobility supplement for the three year period . |
19 | She would have to give up the Pizza Eater . |
20 | Once his identity was known , he would have to give up the singing . |
21 | However , in the meantime it was a daunting thought that if I took promotion I would have to give up the job in which I was most happy . |
22 | He had never got over having to give up the shop , caused as much by growing bronchial problems as by falling business . |
23 | If the Government wanted to have an effective environmental policy , it would have to put up the money . |
24 | I have no recollection of how I found my way there in the dark , but I do remember having to knock up the concièrge , who grumbled in just the style portrayed in the cinema . |
25 | People will puke up all over the place and since it 's your fault , you 'll have to clear up the mess . |
26 | ‘ Care managers have a very tough job and there will be some decisions they will have to refer up the management hierarchy . |
27 | That means either taxpayers or consumers will have to cough up the cash to make up the difference between expensive British coal and cheaper foreign coal . |
28 | There is a slim chance that you will have to make up the shortfall . |
29 | Civic Theatre director Brian Goddard says the internationally acclaimed English Shakespeare Company will have to make up the money for lost bar , ice cream and coffee sales . |
30 | The clinics will have to make up the difference with funds from the Länder , thereby ensuring that the money is used for its intended purpose . |