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

  Next page
No Sentence
1 You do n't have to make a firm commitment but obviously we like you to give us some idea of your availability .
2 Now that each party has formal election procedures through which to choose its Leader , the Queen in normal circumstances will not have to make a personal choice between rival candidates for Prime Minister , a choice which she had to make in 1957 and in 1963 before the Conservative Party adopted election rules .
3 It took the view that the upper limit is arbitrary , and might operate unfairly , since a person just above the limit receives no assistance , whereas a person just below it might have to make a substantial contribution but would have the security of knowing that that contribution represents the maximum liability for costs regardless of the actual cost or the outcome of the case .
4 He 'd have to make a better trap though .
5 It is nigh on impossible to get the mirror and glass completely clean , so you will have to make a slight compromise by accepting that there will always be a certain amount of dust caught between the two layers of glass , due to static electricity .
6 With the inevitable increase in office rent , rates , postage , telephone and stationery etc. it is obvious that we shall all have to make a great effort to overcome this problem .
7 It seems to me this student bar , does have to make a vast profit .
8 When , typically , TCG takes more than 20% of the proceeds of realisation , the investor would have to make a real gain of more than 25% on his new investment just to recoup the tax .
9 We auc we auctioned the books after as you know and erm so I I 'll have to make a new list of what 's left and let you have it .
10 I have to say that in no way will this option be better than the colour changer , because for Norwegian jacquard , you will still have to make a semi-automatic colour change with the jacquard claw every two rows and this is slower .
11 If banks ' liquidity ratios are now below the prudent minimum , they will have to make a multiplied contraction in credit .
12 Mathematically we can still be caught , but we 'd have to make a big mistake .
13 As a matter of fact , I 've enjoyed the day very much indeed , so you do n't have to make a big thing of being grateful . ’
14 You might have to make a quick getaway !
15 They will have to make a conscious effort to treat the assessment of need as a separate exercise from consideration of the service response .
16 Remember , you should not have to make a special journey or travel extra distances to recycle , as this will waste energy .
17 Yanto realised he might well have to make a special journey to pick up the old man if Julie happened to be out .
18 No word on whether IBM will have to make a matching contribution .
19 Once again the Captain will have to make a manual approach .
20 You do not have to make an immediate decision .
21 Another is that gravity does not seem to be renormalizable ; in order to obtain finite answers , it seems that one may have to make an infinite number of infinite subtractions with a correspondingly infinite number of undetermined finite remainders .
22 It is hoped that they do , because it can be shown that theories that include gravity are either finite or nonrenormalizable ; that is , if one has to make any infinite subtractions , then one will have to make an infinite number of them with a corresponding infinite number of undetermined remainders .
23 You may have to make an important decision , your love life seems to flourish and pr proposals of marriage are in the air .
24 He 's also the Education Secretary and says he ca n't comment because he 'll have to make the final decision .
25 If a new Prime Minister were needed for an emergency coalition and no obvious successor existed , the Sovereign would have to make the best choice possible .
26 The plaintiff will still have to make the necessary amendments to his statement of claim and , if he has left it this late to do so , may well find himself in difficulty over costs if the action has to be stood out or adjourned because the defendant has not been given adequate notice .
27 The range of variables is enormous but in each case the staff will have to make the right decision and correctly judge each trainee 's competence .
28 The first two characters to the door can get out freely , but then a Ward of Forbiddance appears in the doorway and other characters still in the room will have to make the appropriate WP test(s) to escape .
29 As the spend over the three years will be more than that — last year 's spend was £17 million and I expect this year 's to be £25 million , making a total of £42 million — I suppose that I could give my hon. Friend the assurance that he seeks , but even if our figures were so way out that I could be caught on that commitment , when I consider the matter next May — assuming that the burden still falls to me to do so — I would have to make the same calculation as I made this year .
30 He would have to make the same improvement as his stable-companion Forest Sun did from Chepstow to Ascot to be given a sporting chance here .
  Next page