Example sentences of "have [verb] [adv prt] [art] [noun] " in BNC.
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1 | At that moment he would have given up every moment of his past and future freedom to have her at his side . |
2 | I can not resist saying that when Japan finally exchanges her peaceful simplicity , her admiration for , and artistic appreciation of , Nature 's beauties , and her contented national life , for the storm stress , and hurry of that feverish existence known to the West , she will have given up the substance for the shadow . |
3 | Had it not been for Pam 's voice cajoling him onward and upward , he would have given up the struggle . |
4 | At this stage most people would have given up the struggle and for a time settled for Ted , who by now had enlisted new blood into his team , including the trusty old campaigner , John Peyton , and Peter Walker , who was re-engaged as Ted 's campaign manager . |
5 | Add a small local earthquake and most men would have given up the ghost . |
6 | I tell you another thing that amazes me , how any one with a Sovereign right , were a Sovereign in those days , could have given up the palace of Westminster which is so beautiful , palace , together I suppose reigned after the Duke of is it ? |
7 | Will I have to strip down the tank and start again ? |
8 | A number of changes will have occurred : it will have lost ten to fifteen per cent of its weight through loss of water ; the cell structures in the meat will have broken down ; the proteins will have changed into individual amino acids ( developing the flavour ) ; the muscle filaments — yes , the noble carcass is no more than a collection of muscles , bone and fat — will have broken down a bit and become more tender . |
9 | ‘ Pray , sir , may I ask you , do you think that if St. Paul happened to be travelling with us and had passed the place where he was born , that he would have pointed out the fact to us ? ’ |
10 | 4–4 They were unaware that they should have filled in a Schedule for Erection of New Charges but now did so . |
11 | If you ask me , they should have incorporated Catharism into their own theology , it would have filled in a lot of holes … ’ |
12 | and then we 'll have to cancel out the garage , so do n't know how much that 's gon na be . |
13 | Breakfast Car will probably have to go up a grade and go to slightly posher places . ’ |
14 | Yeah , I think you 'll have to go round a bit . |
15 | No longer did they have to go down the backstairs during the night , and into the yard and across it to where the three outdoor lavatories stood . |
16 | ‘ We 'll have to go down the off-licence . ’ |
17 | No , oh I know what I never got that ai n't finished I 'll have to go down the shops , I might go down |
18 | Because you 're not , because you 're inside a lot , you do n't have to go out every day , you do n't , you do n't have anything very specific to do at different times during the day . |
19 | I could surely have bluffed out the running ; it was the standing under the rod that was the important part , the critical part ; why had n't I realised that ? |
20 | At one time you could have travelled up the Aspe valley by railway , and entered Spain through a tunnel five miles long under the final ridge . |
21 | For many people the saddest aspect was the selectors ' policy of playing Randall at number three ; every fan in the country could have told them that he should have batted down the order and that exposing him so early was almost certain to fail . |
22 | ‘ Surely someone should have checked out the complaints more carefully . ’ |
23 | If this does not work , you will have to drain down the pipe and remove the fitting . |
24 | Unless the contract is frustrated , the seller will still have to carry out the contract and if he delivers goods which do not comply with it , he will be in breach of contract . |
25 | Erm , if you ask for what actions we could take , then we 'll have to work out a way of doing it . |
26 | She would have to work out the rest of her shift , but she would take the next day off and go to see the doctor . |
27 | People in late twentieth-century Britain do not necessarily do less for their relatives than they have done for the past two centuries , nor do they necessarily have a weaker sense of obligation , but they do have to work out the nature of their relationships and the patterns of support associated with them , in circumstances which are very different from the past . |
28 | So if you can think about it like laterally but we gon na have to work out an argument |
29 | Next week came , and we never got that half hour , so it must have added up a lot , all throughout the year . |
30 | Or in North Africa , having left the 11th Field Regiment , he might have sat out the rest of the war in luxury , gaining rank through time and , come the Peace , have been a live major instead of a dead lieutenant . |