Example sentences of "have [to-vb] up [prep] the " in BNC.
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1 | Do these all have to go up to the tower ? ’ |
2 | Going back to the agents up in the town , the boatmen to get information about a ship coming in they would have to go up to the town |
3 | They would have to go up to the town , yes |
4 | Soon they will have to go up to the front-line again . |
5 | They 'll have to go up into the attic . |
6 | Everything 's got to be sorted out I think her pram and her other desk is gon na have to go up in the |
7 | Yet despite one way traffic at times , Newcastle will have to tighten up at the heart of a defence that looked vulnerable . |
8 | Companies behind with their accounts and returns submissions will have to catch up in the next 12 months . |
9 | I might have to walk up to the pier to find a bin . ’ |
10 | I shall just have to put up with the pain . ’ |
11 | Countries opting for soft membership would have to put up with the first , and find substitutes for the second — for instance , by setting ( and hitting ) targets for money-GDP , using both fiscal and monetary policies . |
12 | ‘ Josh will have to put up with the life that his mother can afford to lead . ’ |
13 | It seems that England might just have to put up with the barracking of the public , press and the other home nations Wales , Scotland and Northern Ireland . |
14 | You 'll just have to put up with the printer chugging away . |
15 | The Government are hoping to carry on and according to the Secretary of State for the Environment the people will have to put up with the tax until 1993 . |
16 | The present players do not have to put up with the old ‘ Chicken Run . ’ |
17 | I 'm afraid you 'll have to wake up to the fact that that kind of man from that kind of a family would n't know the meaning of love . ’ |
18 | But then it would have to face up to the fact that , by comparison with much of the rest of the world , it would grow steadily poorer with no chance of arresting that trend until well into the next century . |
19 | The Queen for her own part will have to face up to the fact that , however perfect her public role , she has dismally failed in private to give her children the guidance they needed for stable marriages . |
20 | Beyen argued that in the long term the ‘ sector ’ approach to co-operation would have to face up to the need for an all-embracing ‘ common market ’ reducing all trade barriers between the Six . |
21 | ‘ No , I 'm afraid I ca n't — and I 'm also afraid that you might have to face up to the fact that Silas has n't got private talks in mind , ’ Lucy pointed out gently . |
22 | She 'll just have to face up to the fact that he 's guilty , I 'm afraid . ’ |
23 | Somehow he 'd have to get up to the wood today to fetch down his Dad 's clippers and wire . |
24 | You did n't have to get up at the crack of dawn to work out yardages . |
25 | If you take advantage of our superb offer , you wo n't have to get up at the crack of dawn and drag your clubs in and out of the car boot . |
26 | My brother and I used to have a joke — we saw how hard our father worked — that we would only consider medicine if we could become specialists in venereal diseases , because we would never have to get up in the middle of the night and we would never be out of work . |
27 | So likewise the Saturday nights here , I 'm alright I do n't have to get up in the morning . |
28 | It will have to be for us at least twenty one days , that 's the absolute rock bottom minimum I would have thought therefore the French I suspect have us over a barrel and we would have to cough up for the enormous expenditure of an extra building at Strasbourg which is not needed erm as I understand it er that er view I savoured I do n't erm have the details of that . |
29 | Note roughly how much you will have to take up on the longer line . |
30 | Any child under 12 and less than five feet tall will have to belt up in the front or rear . |