Example sentences of "they have [to-vb] [prep] [adj] " in BNC.

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1 Each time the yen slips , the larger these dollar-based assets loom in the banks ' balance sheets — and the more they have to scrounge for additional yen-based equity at home in order to prevent their capital-adequacy figures from slipping back below the BIS requirement .
2 So they have to rely on self-help projects , We have established two small primary schools and a number of very modest — clinics with Mexican doctors who have offered their services free .
3 Now there are 8 and they have to talk to each other .
4 ‘ We now need to have good communications and contracts with tourist attractions , so we know exactly when they are open and if they have to close for any reason , ’ says Ms Burrows .
5 ‘ They can learn the ropes for a season or two — and they wo n't get the stick they have to take in other leagues . ’
6 Since the contributors to the literature on the new classical macroeconomics rarely take the trouble to furnish a fully articulated theory of the firm in which cost shocks are given equal prominence with demand shocks , one is entitled to take what they have to say on short-run supply responses with a large fistful of salt .
7 And they have to move to other industries , er productive industries and service industries and er communications for example which is very run down , and that 's going to take I should think , six to nine months of really hard work and suffering , and and a political clean up at the same time , because in the schools and universities for instance , er nobody could get a job in the old days , who was n't politically reliable , and all those people have got to be moved .
8 ‘ Constitutional matters do not have anything to do with being on speaking terms , they have to do with legal status .
9 They have to do with overlapping , but not necessarily co-extensive aspirations for specialist teams .
10 We have indicated that organisations exist within a changing environment and they have to respond to this environment .
11 Moreover , organisations may be viewed as existing in a competitive environment , as do plants and animals , and they have to adapt to environmental conditions or perhaps find their existence threatened .
12 A second possibility — the mate-guarding or ‘ chaperone ’ hypothesis — suggests that males are more vigilant than females because they have to guard against promiscuous ‘ rape ’ attempts on their female partners .
13 Day after day they have to live with those policies and spending commitments .
14 They have to cope with one or more project managers , and to take orders from their own department head .
15 She says they have children to bring up and have suffered the stress of a broken marriage and now they have to cope with all this .
16 And then they 're at a disadvantage when they have to deal with real life problems . ’
17 They can not concentrate wholly on matters put before them by civil servants because they have to deal with parliamentary duties , party business and constituency cases .
18 You do n't have to go to Amsterdam first , but you come to Heathrow , a lot of people assume they have to go to right into London .
19 If things are not just right , they have to go through that process all over again .
20 Such a situation also undermines the role of district nurses and health visitors if they have to go through that procedure when they know that they should be able to take the responsibility .
21 The situation that , that a lot of people find themselves in nowadays , now er council housing is no longer available to an awful lot of people , is that they 're at the mercy of private landlords , and in order to have any kind of home they have to go along this sort of conditions and rent levels laid down by private landlords .
22 That 's to say that men embody themselves in partial versions of themselves , and then , in order to realize themselves more fully , they have to overcome by many kinds of struggle this previous realization .
23 Every country has its own system for using frequencies , and they have to think about each other — radio waves , after all do not stop at national boundaries and without international collaboration there could be interference and general chaos .
24 No wonder people get screwed up if they have to think like that . ’
25 In southern Africa several of the states have no coastline , Zambia Zimbabwe Malawi Swaziland so they have to depend upon other countries for access erm to the coast , and that means their transport patterns are very very dependent upon others .
26 I mean erm you know erm when I go to the London Group erm we all know that erm actually er there 's a kind of , there 's an inner feeling you know well we 've got the right computers , we , we 're the you know , we , we believe computing and we , we 're very sorry you know we 're erm we may not actively despise them , but we , we 're sorry that they have to bother with such an awful operating system and everything else .
27 Pete says they set off and race around a course … they are given a landmark such as a cross roads or a church and they have to fly to that point take pictures of it and the fastest there and back takes the points
28 The actual notes used are not completely constant , as they have to change for tonal reasons , but one has a general impression of constancy through the unchanging regular movement and similarity in note shapes :
29 ‘ It makes them more responsible for their own work and gets them into the idea that they have to work outside normal school hours .
30 However well-integrated they seem to be , they are still outsiders , as well as insiders , and they have to work with this double agency .
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