Example sentences of "have [verb] [prep] a [noun] " in BNC.

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1 I 'll prepare a ship at Bristol , take you and Hawkins with me , and have that treasure if I have to search for a year ! ’
2 You can buy just about everything you ever need in Funchal , but you may have to search to find it — many shops may just recently have run out of the very product you want , so that you have to search for a shop which still has old stock until more is imported .
3 If you have to go through a field of animals move carefully and quietly .
4 Graphics applications run very slowly because they have to go through a filter to ensure they do n't crash the machine .
5 You have to go through a sort of incubation period while people weigh you up .
6 I have to go to a cocktail party at the Library Association this evening , ’ he went on , ‘ so I 'm afraid I sha n't be able to be the ministering angel .
7 Perhaps when their children have to go to a run-down , underfunded , understaffed State school they will understand why most of the country is up in arms about the state of the education system .
8 Bereaved pet owners no longer have to go to a cemetery to give their cat or dog a loving send off .
9 And she 's bringing Alia and Adem to play with you We 're just going to Beckenham because we have to go to a shop there .
10 And , and even if you were on night duty you 'd be on night duty for twelve hours , you 'd come off at eight in the morning and have to go to a lecture at nine .
11 Sometimes , when I have to make precious substances such as toenail cheese or belly-button fluff , I have to go without a shower or bath for days and days ; I hate doing this because I soon feel dirty and itchy , and the only bright thing about such abstinence is how good it feels to have a shower at the end of it .
12 You have to go across a lot of water to get there . ’
13 Now we cross to the other side of the no go area but turning is called tacking , and so to make ground for wind width we have to go in a series of zig-zags , each time turning for about ninety degrees and see that the sail is kept full most of the time only flapping momentarily as the boat turns directly through the eye of the wind .
14 Going through it er would be a problem , going through Newark actually going through you have to go round a system as you as you quite rightly said .
15 I have checked with a breeder and my Angel is a female .
16 First impressions , as you pass beyond the large tumbled blocks of Gendarme Ridge , is that you have stumbled into a quarry .
17 Scientists have stumbled across a chemical that caused Parkinson-like symptoms in six heroin addicts who were admitted , desperately ill , to the Santa Clara Valley Medical Center 's neurology unit last summer .
18 Now that tax rates on income have fallen to a maximum of 40% , there is less incentive for individuals to buy low coupon gilts to take advantage of the tax-free capital appreciation .
19 Global ozone levels have fallen to a record low , according to measurements by NASA 's Nimbus-7 weather satellite .
20 An officers report to Monday 's committee says standards have fallen over a number of years .
21 In fact , Sparcbook sales were so good , Woan said , that OEM revenues have fallen as a percentage of group total to 37% in 1993 from 48% in 1992 .
22 In fact , Sparcbook sales were so good , Woan said , that OEM revenues have fallen as a percentage of group total to 37% in 1993 from 48% in 1992 .
23 To an extent educationalists have fallen into a pit of their own making .
24 We have fallen into an ageist trap and attempted to generalise and to stereotype .
25 It is estimated that they have fallen from a peak of £62 a square foot to £38 .
26 The horses trained by O'Brien for this public company have not fulfilled expectations and the shares have fallen from an issue price of 30p to 17p .
27 It says farm jobs in the EC 's 12 member states have fallen by an average of 2.8% every year for the past 30 years .
28 I have heard of a battle , of Myrcan fighting Myrcan , and many upheavals amongst the Rorim to the south .
29 , writes : TWICE in recent weeks I have heard of a character which sounds like Notre Dames and they say he was played in a film by Orson Welles .
30 For example , in at least one rural area , we have heard of a tendency for professional people to send their children to the nearby town or another village school if they feel their own village school is unsatisfactory . ’
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