Example sentences of "have get [pos pn] [noun] [adv prt] " in BNC.

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1 KAREN Davison has got her skates on to become a sporting ambassador for Middlesbrough .
2 Mr Carter 's closer relationship with Mr Bush has got his smile back into the newspapers , but Mr Carter has never stopped believing he can help solve the world 's problems .
3 Ferguson added : ‘ Lee has got his sparkle back .
4 He 's really striking the ball well and he has got his confidence back . ’
5 The sun has got his hat on and he 's coming out to play .
6 Told you she 'd got her claws in , but you would n't have it .
7 She 'd got her voice back too late to answer , she thought now as she remembered the incident .
8 Well round near us they terrorized an eighty three year old lady er near us and er it was a , I met the man next door and his wife and they were the ones that got the police because he said they 'd got her furniture out on the pavement to with a doodah up there .
9 I thought it a bit off that she 'd never asked how I 'd got her pendant back .
10 He had taken a le , he had a taken a license off , he 'd got his money back on his license .
11 Well it was her fault really for not checking he 'd got his tie on .
12 Do you remember when Gordon went rushing through when he 'd got his whistles out ?
13 I 'd got my voice back : ‘ Well then .
14 And of course , er by nineteen forty erm well , Christmas thirty nine , I 'd got my calling up papers .
15 But like , it was alright then because like means that you can changed up in this one corner of the changing room all the time and so I 'd got my shirt on while I was putting my T-shirt on like for the reason that my bra strap was bust , not actually because I 'd got a gigantic love bite around my neck !
16 I 'd got my shoes on and I were , I just went flung my shoes and flung my handbag , I went oh ! like that to Linda .
17 Bless him , he went away with the promise of a full sitting when I 'd got my face back from the cleaners .
18 For the first time we 've had to get our heads down and look at what we 're doing .
19 Having got his attention-grabbers out of the way , Mr Beckman went on to the more serious stuff .
20 They may not have got their feet up there in the stirrups with the wife , but they did get through two boxes of Kleenex .
21 He gave them far more money than the business was worth or than they should ever have got their hands on .
22 We 'd have got your mother back out of that place . ’
23 But for that he would have got his sword out of its scabbard , and the fight they could not afford would have been on in earnest .
24 It encouraged him towards early independence and self-sufficiency without which he would not have got his career off to so quick a start ; and it must have contributed to the ease with which , to further that career , he uprooted himself first from South Africa and later from his adopted second homeland in Britain .
25 If I 'd have got my clothes on to get
26 Right , it 's clear i n't it under four rule twenty eight , four , it 's not essential for the disallowance of any cost or interest that er the taxing officer should be satisfied that erm the other party has been prejudiced , in fact that is not a condition precedent to the exercise of his part and disallow interest in this here item , er any prejudice there maybe is merely one factor to be taken into account in other matters and it does seem to me that the fact the court can , can properly and should properly take into account , is , is that erm , it is desirable that to litigation should erm comply with there obligations , either expressly , express or explicit under the rules of the court to comply with matter such as it should have orders part drawn up and served as appropriate , as I say it seems to me that er the plaintiffs 's can be criticized in not erm having perfected the order of Mr Justice er before they did so but er , I have , it seems to me to look at all the relevant pictures in the case , er if it were the case that the plaintiff suffered any prejudice as the result of that claim , clearly that would be a matter which I would have to take into account , but I 'm bound to say it does n't seem to me that the fender of the plaintiffs to perfect the order did in fact cause any prejudice to the plaintiff and indeed if they , the plaintiffs had perfected the order , it seems to me exactly the same course of events as in fact transpired in this case , would actually have occurred and would n't make any difference at all , so unless it 's a matter of simply of er seeking to punish the plaintiff as a matter of discipline , it seems to me there is a , not really anything in the point that the order was not perfected er when it seems to me it should of been , and I , there stood to see the other er circumstances , now it 's quite clear to me having been referred to correspondence , passing between the solicitors that erm although really from a very early stage er the plaintiffs solicitors referring to Mr a letter of early nineteen ninety one indicating that erm the view was being taken that the likelihood was that erm the plaintiffs would have to get their costs out of the defendants share and interest in the premises and er that would be a matter which could only be dealt with when the enquiries director by Mr Justice had been dealt with .
27 You 'll have to get your stuff down and , you know what one we 'll have to get , you know those big cases that she get 's from Ikea , and bring it all down and get one of those for your bedroom and keep it all in Started your homework yet Lee ?
28 Then one night on a late shift , the young man in the booth came over and said , ‘ If you are going to stay , you 'll have to get your productivity up ’ .
29 we 'll have to get our skates on for rugby … they 're kicking off at Kingsholm at seven o clock
30 The party was delighted to have got its hands back on to the levers of power and to have smashed the Labour Party in the process .
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