Example sentences of "have [verb] to [adj] [noun sg] " in BNC.

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1 Teachers would have to agree to unlimited teaching hours and weekend and bank holiday working .
2 I ca n't play that sort of trick on him — besides , I 'd only have to agree to another date . ’
3 It may have been enacted beforehand by the witnesses , so that they testify to what they have actually witnessed ; alternatively , the organiser of the mock trial may simply have given to each witness a statement of his evidence , which he is expected to remember .
4 Then he wondered if he was capable of putting what he must have heard to some use .
5 she , she Anne 's gone Aunty Anne 's , she wo n't have to go to that job .
6 And now they tell us we might even have to go to some barn that has n't even got proper floorboards for us to live under as Arnold Bros ( est. 1905 ) intended .
7 If councillors recommend development , it will have to go to Welsh Secretary David Hunt for a final decision .
8 Dr Kent thinks she 's reached a plateau , and the odds are she wo n't have to go to intensive care . ’
9 I suppose I 'll have to go to this Sheldrake man for my pigs . ’
10 In this case , the laws of science would determine the universe completely ; one would not have to appeal to some agency external to the universe to determine how it began .
11 Yeah but I do n't see how that might have to relate to national curriculum er
12 Such stroppiness would have amounted to commercial suicide after ten months of silence .
13 There are also mobile teams who travel to outlying communities so that people do not all have to come to one centre .
14 Young Anna is going to be well heeled but she will have to come to some arrangement with Beryl and Beryl would prefer , much , to deal with the devil himself .
15 And then if er you want a so solicitor with you on that day we 'll have to come to some arrangement with you privately about the costs .
16 What evidence do we have relating to French music of the late 17th and early 18th centuries in respect of ( 1 ) the persistence of the mensural system , notably concerning tempo relationships , ( 2 ) the tempo connotations of ‘ expressive ’ verbal directions , the so-called ‘ time-words ’ and ( 3 ) actual timings and metronome markings ?
17 7.6.6.1 the Term will absolutely cease but without prejudice to any rights or remedies that may have accrued to either party against the other including ( without prejudice to the generality of the above ) any right that the Tenant might have against the Landlord for a breach of the Landlord 's covenants set out in clauses 7.6.1 and 7.6.2
18 In most starts , there is usually only one boat which is able to make a perfect start ; everyone else will have to compromise to some extent .
19 At first instance , the judge held that the accommodation had to be appropriate and that no reasonable authority could have come to that conclusion in this case .
20 Whether he would have come to that conclusion if the building was betting-shop is an interesting thought , but we ‘ ve been delighted to go along with his judgement .
21 I do not think that if the council , on making an inspection , had found the gate newly padlocked , they could have come to any conclusion other than that [ the defendant ] was intending to exclude everyone , including themselves , from the land . " …
22 Where the minister and elders of a church have decided to pursue an application for demolition , remember they may only have come to this decision as a last resort , perhaps having received advice that there was no possibility of alternative use .
23 He may have come to this decision in 1531 or 1532 and then proceeded cautiously because of the fear of opposition both at home and abroad .
24 We would have hoped that the county and district councils would have so organized their selection processes that they could have come to this examination in public fully prepared to argue the merits of geographical location .
25 In the censorship scale obscene literature might be rated as less serious than racist literature but both would have to defer to seditious literature which normally does not find its way on to library shelves .
26 PS John Pemberton was a right-back in his days at Palace though he may have moved to central defence .
27 Moreover , one might predict further that had royalty in 1940 continued with the rich pageants of peacetime ( as the Prince Regent had done during the Napoleonic wars ) , the indifference might have turned to explicit criticism .
28 She took a deep breath before storming angrily at Doreen , ‘ I do n't have to listen to this sort of talk from you .
29 They also want to assess more fully the damage that the debacle might have done to long-term customer confidence in Ferranti .
30 Conran acknowledges that in the face of-City rumour it is important for a group such as his to communicate to the outside world what its overall strategy is and to spell out the logic of its master plan — something he feels Storehouse might have done to better effect prior to becoming besieged by unwelcome take-over bids .
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