Example sentences of "have [vb pp] [adj] [noun] with " in BNC.

  Next page
No Sentence
1 They will have heard repeated discussions with other people previously , or comments from their parents that they are ‘ bad and naughty ’ .
2 Some estates may have received new owners with little change , or they could have been divided and redistributed ; others may have been enlarged with the addition of adjacent lands or groups of estates under a single owner .
3 To give the appearance of aging Joni could have mixed extra glue with the pigments which , when exposed to heat ( as in an oven ) would crack in a convincing way .
4 Stein will also have seen grand pianos with an action design very like that of Cristofori made by Johann Heinrich in the same workshop .
5 It is unsurprising that the cinema should have sought legal parity with the theatre on questions of obscenity , which it did in a petition forwarded to the Home Secretary by the BBFC in 1977 on behalf of the Cinema Consultative Committee , which comprised delegates from the film industry and from all the associations of local licensing authorities in Great Britain and Northern Ireland .
6 Nor should you be disconnected for a debt owed by a previously registered consumer , but you must have made proper arrangements with the fuel boards to take over the supply .
7 Said a daily newspaper : ‘ The Beatles and the Stones may have had similar scenes but even they could never have induced bullet-headed toughies with flat noses and bovver boots to wear stick-on gold stars round their eyes . ’
8 St. Peter 's must have had strong affinity with the nearby Castle .
9 So they might well have had convenient discussions with the N R A as late as Friday even though their letter preem the Inspectorate 's letter was written on the eighth of September and Friday of course was the day after this letter had been released to us on our request and was was two days after the Selby committee had met on Wednesday .
10 Although children will already have had everyday experiences with water this may be the first time that water has been offered to them as a material to play and experiment with .
11 She had only seen Johnny dressed in what she supposed must be the nineteen forties ' version of casual wear ; but , of course , when he was formally attired he would have worn starched collars with his shirt , detachable and fastened with one of the studs which she now held in her hand .
12 At the highest level of society there were the names given to the great tenants-in-chief who held their estates directly of the Conqueror , and it must be remembered that if these magnates were already powerful in their own country they may even have brought locative bynames with them , as was the case of William de Moyon already mentioned .
13 This the Society secured for solicitors conducting investment business exemption from the terms of the EC Investment Services Directive , which would have involved burdensome compliance with associated capital requirements .
14 Lubin comments that ‘ Shyness probably made concrete political action impossible , for this would have required direct action with other people .
  Next page