Example sentences of "has [to-vb] [art] [noun] for " in BNC.
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1 | Instead he has to wait a week for next Saturday 's Victoria Ground clash with Swansea . |
2 | Clearly , formulations of gist and upshot are important in written and formal spoken discourse too , although there the task of the sender is much harder , as he or she has to estimate the need for reformulation at any given point . |
3 | In The Favour , The Watch And The Very Big Fish Bob Hoskins plays a Paris photographer of religious themes who has to find a model for Christ on the cross and comes up with Jeff Goldblum , an ex-convict and former lover of an actress ( Natasha Richardson ) , who he meets at a pornographic dubbing studio . |
4 | Is this really censorship or just part of the normal dialogue between author and publisher , who has to find an audience for the book . |
5 | ‘ And , Mr Oak , ’ she continued in a clear voice , ‘ I 'm so poor that my aunt has to provide a home for me . |
6 | Angela now has to choose a name for her 7lb 8oz daughter . |
7 | This is fine , but clarify whether it 's you or the manufacturer that has to foot the bill for sending the machine back . |
8 | All aircraft and ships are banned from carrying it into the Philippines , and the Filipino Consul in Hawaii has to give the go-ahead for any flight containing Mr Marcos 's remains before it is allowed to take off . |
9 | They forget that New York has to share the blame for ‘ the Nige ’ , although he 's obstinately unfamous here . |
10 | With Prince Philip , she has to share the blame for the disastrous decade which has engulfed the royals . |
11 | One only has to consider the markets for restaurant meals , motor cars and clothes to realize that there are more than two successful cost-quality mixes available in a number of industries . |
12 | Everybody has a boss , a person who has the responsibility to oversee his or her work ; the Chairperson of the Board has the company 's shareholders while the Prime Minister has to face the electorate for a renewal of the mandate at least every five years . |
13 | To the concern for another serious reactor accident , one has to add the concern for accidents during other stages of the nuclear fuel cycle , the long-term risks associated with the safe disposal of ever-increasing radioactive waste , and the decommissioning of nuclear power plants at the end of their 30-year operating life ( about 100 such stations by the end of the century ) . |
14 | The small child has to pay a price for every step she makes to independence . |
15 | The problem is that we do n't get the following day 's forecast until 4pm and sometimes it has to join the queue for updating . |
16 | This is particularly evident when the writer has to organize the negotiations for the essential deals with foreign sub-publishers who collect royalties in non-UK territories . |
17 | First of all I should point out that the Nor the County Council er figure of none thousand seven hundred is actually a figure for local needs plus one hundred percent migration , and if you follow Mr Thomas 's figures that leaves a residual requirement of nine hundred and forty seven dwellings without any windfalls over the next thirteen years , which is quite inconceivable , so in order to establish his point on the need for the new settlement on tha on on his figures , the Bar Mr Grigson of Barton Willmore has to up the figure for Greater York to twelve thousand seven hundred , as set out in his erm paper . |
18 | The bright gold and green foliage which makes the crowning glory of the winter border has to become a backdrop for the summer garden . |
19 | But I hope he 'll be able to make her understand that she ca n't ever have me , and that she has to make a life for herself away from me . ’ |
20 | So the teacher has to make the connections for them initially . |
21 | In defence of the industries , however , one has to make an allowance for the social costs of policies ( such as maintaining an uneconomic rail service for a community or loss-making plants in areas of high unemployment ) and for decisions on pricing , investment , and employment which are shaped in part by the political calculations of the government of the day . |