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

  Next page
No Sentence
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 was not an answer he would have given to many people , but he looked on Edna as an equal .
4 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 .
5 A huge £50 million has been raised for charity since the race started in 1981 and runners can pat themselves on the back for all the financial help they have given to worthy causes .
6 Then he wondered if he was capable of putting what he must have heard to some use .
7 Do n't put it in a plastic bag in the fridge and save it for visitors ; before you know where you are it 'll have swollen to three times its size and smell like a chemical factory .
8 However comprehensive the pre-planning of such a situation , it could be anticipated that preliminary reconnaissance , the dispositioning of appliances , the gaining of access by the very limited facilities which such premises can offer and the initiation of a co-ordinated attack of conventional equipment would take even longer and that a fire may have developed to unmanageable proportions by the time such an attack could be mounted .
9 By 2000 the arable land in use per head will have fallen to 0.25 hectares from 0.37 hectares in 1975 ; in Africa it will almost have halved from 0.64 to 0.39 hectares .
10 Did Hamilton have to go to 4 dimensions to find his algebra ?
11 she , she Anne 's gone Aunty Anne 's , she wo n't have to go to that job .
12 But do we have to go to distant worlds to find other kinds of replicator and other , consequent , kinds of evolution ?
13 But in order to justify termination of your services on this basis , the employer would certainly have to go to great lengths to treat you in a caring and reasonable manner .
14 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 .
15 If councillors recommend development , it will have to go to Welsh Secretary David Hunt for a final decision .
16 Dr Kent thinks she 's reached a plateau , and the odds are she wo n't have to go to intensive care . ’
17 If there is a shortfall of Catholic school provision in an area , it has never been accepted that Catholic pupils should have to go to non-Catholic schools .
18 I suppose I 'll have to go to this Sheldrake man for my pigs . ’
19 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 .
20 Every week we would have to adjust to new teachers ; it made us adaptable but did n't do much for our education .
21 In 1989 it was planned that doctors would have to work to new contracts , under which their pay would be more clearly related to the number of patients .
22 But Sweden has also promised that in 20 years its emissions of carbon dioxide ( CO 2 ) , the main greenhouse gas , will have dropped to 1986 levels .
23 Yeah but I do n't see how that might have to relate to national curriculum er
24 Such stroppiness would have amounted to commercial suicide after ten months of silence .
25 It was forecast that by the close of 1991 the revenue from sales worldwide of CD-ROM hardware and software would have amounted to some $3.2 billion of which the title component would be $2.3 billion , a proportion which would steadily increase .
26 There are also mobile teams who travel to outlying communities so that people do not all have to come to one centre .
27 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 .
28 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 .
29 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 ?
30 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
  Next page