Example sentences of "have have a [noun] [noun] " in BNC.

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1 Had Canada won against the Swedes , Australia would then have had a home tie against them with the chance to recoup some of their financial losses in Cyprus , coupled with the incentive of knowing that further success would probably earn them a home match with the United States in the semi-finals .
2 Everyone with shares should have had a payment notice saying how much they owe .
3 ‘ You could n't have had a golf course made for a man 's game more than that golf course for John Daly , ’ observed the man who has won more Masters than anyone , six all told and now playing his 34th in succession .
4 The Marquis may have had a diggicult year but the last few months though have been more difficult for Becky Blandford .
5 South America could easily have had a marsupial anteater , alongside its marsupial sabre-tooth " tiger " , but as it happens the anteater trade was early filled by placental mammals instead .
6 In fact , if I had n't rung through to the police station we 'd have had a squad car on our doorstep by now . ’
7 An invigoratingly stormy relationship was in the making and if Nicholson had been gossip-column fodder at the time , the writers would have had a field day .
8 The press would have had a field day , and what Frank did n't realize is that he himself would have been a laughing stock .
9 But that wretched Sandra would have had a field day too — her picture in the local rag in her best dress .
10 The body linguists would have had a field day .
11 So to our surprise of this cohort of patients who would have had a T U R , only about a third had obstruction .
12 A lot of people said last year that I should n't have had a factory bike , so I was happy that my early results demonstrated I was worthy of an NSR .
13 During the 1590s Evesham must have had a London workshop .
14 The number of kings who came to grief in the fifth century is staggeringly high , and this must have had a deterrent effect on kings who contemplated taking initiatives .
15 printing papers which after making have had a surface coating with clay etc , to give a smoother , more even finish with greater opacity .
16 In the example , P2 would have had a negligence action against B. The measure of damages would have been the amount required to make the house safe for occupation , i.e. £30,000 .
17 Long Latin words are full of syllables which resemble ‘ bum ’ and ‘ tit ’ and ‘ poo ’ much more , and an idly dreaming miniaturist may have had a thought process set off by half-reading the Latin : if in lege domini ( Psalm 1:2 ) really suggested the funny men made of legs on the opening pages of the Bardolf-Vaux and Ormesby Psalters , then this tells us that the artists , like Professor Camille , spoke English .
18 And it it it 's called the fog index but the thing that 's interesting about it is that I 've got , I 've got some interesting examples of fog indexes erm and you 'll get people like Churchill who sometimes made speeches and their fog index is quite small you 're going to use this you know example and they might have a fog , fog index that 's fine and what Anne and I are talking about with say something like the Telegraph or the Times or whatever , might have a fog index that people but this is because Churchill was very clear , very concise and going back to the original point about , or some of the original points about this , and I was mak raising these issues earlier this evening one of the great sadnesses that I have is that , is that when I first went into journalism the tabloids as we call them were incredibly well written beautifully styled , well researched and okay they might have been punchier and shorter and everything else , compared to the turning up the er the , the Times or whatever , but they were well written and you might have had , if you can put the fog index test , test on it you might have had a fog index of say six or seven compared to eleven on the Telegraph story , but it was still full of clarity like to read .
19 Once the door was shut , they could have had a dance band going full blast and you 'd never know it in the next room .
20 Well , in Brixton they might , but only Lloyd would have had a tenor saxophone painted in gold on its bonnet .
21 If it was just for money , then we would have had a ransom demand by now . ’
22 But those involved in entente floral feel at least they would have had a fighting chance of clinching the title .
23 All right , the secretary of state may have had a Cabinet committee meeting .
24 ‘ They may have panicked , may have had a gut reaction to run . ’
25 Obviously , what is or may be of importance to an employer 's business is a question of fact ; and it was no doubt significant in Swain that S was the general manager , the wrongful employee was the managing director , his conduct was dishonest and it could have had a material effect on the defendant 's business ( labelling meat as " Empire Products " when it was not ) .
26 Sealstones and frescoes often depict cult scenes ; stone vessels were often intended for cult use ; the finest faience figurines were idols ; the metal and clay figurines and miniature double-axes were intended as offerings to deities ; the recurring marine motif on the pottery and in frescoes may have had a cult association with the worship of Poseidon .
27 I must have had a death wish choosing that .
28 Today he would have had a tape recorder : did he , like Dickens , at least have shorthand , a not unknown writerly aid since Cicero 's time ?
29 Leapor 's house , for example , would probably have had a clay floor , and if its lighting was primarily from rushes , it would have been dingy .
30 But for her insistence on being free for Dickie 's holidays she could have had a ward sister 's job in Benedict 's by just picking up the nearest telephone .
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