Example sentences of "have to make the [adj] [noun] " in BNC.

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1 Each age and each individual has to make the imaginative effort to appropriate the religious tradition and make it their own , as Julian did .
2 The subcontractor then has to make the difficult choice of continuing work in the hope of being paid , or withdrawing his labour and reducing the probability of ultimate payment .
3 It was in the 2nd round of the FA Cup in December 1937 when the Palace had had to make the long trip to Accrington on one of the rare times when the draw for this round was not made on a geographical basis .
4 But 5 year old Amy Harding would have found the trauma of having a surgical collar even worse if she 'd had to make the long trip to Gloucester .
5 But in real life she has had to make the difficult transition from child to adult star .
6 He 's also the Education Secretary and says he ca n't comment because he 'll have to make the final decision .
7 The plaintiff will still have to make the necessary amendments to his statement of claim and , if he has left it this late to do so , may well find himself in difficulty over costs if the action has to be stood out or adjourned because the defendant has not been given adequate notice .
8 The range of variables is enormous but in each case the staff will have to make the right decision and correctly judge each trainee 's competence .
9 The first two characters to the door can get out freely , but then a Ward of Forbiddance appears in the doorway and other characters still in the room will have to make the appropriate WP test(s) to escape .
10 However , the firm will have to make the prescribed disclosure that all or most of the FSA protections do not apply if ( even though it does not have to do so ) it tells a private customer that it is a member of SFA or is otherwise FSA-authorised ; or ( 2 ) It is carried on with or for customers in the UK , but the FSA 's overseas person exemption would have applied if that non-UK office had been a separate person from the UK office ( see page 40 above and also below ) or , presumably , is outside the territorial scope of the FSA in any event ; or ( 3 ) The business is that of an appointed representative of the firm and is not carried on in the UK .
11 I did n't even have to make the conventional protests .
12 My fiancé , Derrick , had to make the final decision about the colour etc …
13 Susan , once the excitement of Christmas was over , had completely collapsed , and it was Breeze who had to make the final arrangements for selling 9 Dorchester Terrace , and the auctioning of the furniture .
14 Although it may have taken only an instant , the person to whom this sentence refers had to make the logical jump from what he could see of the possible escape routes open to him to the realization that flight was impossible .
15 The day when McQuaid always used to come from the fair in Mohill and we had to make the big tea . ’
16 Of the seventy-eight clergy whom he ordained , fifty-three had to make the difficult journey to Pelynt for their ordination , either at Trelawne or in the parish church , while in his last seven years as Bishop , only twice did he travel to Exeter for an ordination .
17 Browne had tentatively suggested the summer of that year as the " deadline " for it , but Eliot was uncertain how quickly he could recover his dramatic skills and , since he often needed to work slowly , he believed the spring of 1949 to be a more appropriate date.Throughout the spring and summer of 1948 he worked on it as consistently as he could , although there were egregious interruptions : in April , for example , he had to make the British Council trip to Aix-en-Provence which had been postponed the previous winter .
18 ‘ After all , I only have to make the right moves at the right time . ’
19 What we have to do , we have to make the mental leap into a very different world in which witchcraft and dreams and superstitions and so on are mingling together and we must make that effort , and not just assume that somehow it 's William Gladstone who happens to be dressed up in Oliver Cromwell 's clothes .
20 It is those who do not come from those dominant traditions who have to make the sympathetic adjustment .
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