Example sentences of "have just [verb] [n mass] " in BNC.

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1 DSC Communications Corp , Dallas has just raised $110m in convertible subordinated debentures which have received a B-minus rating from Standard & Poor 's Corp , which revised the company 's ratings outlook to positive from stable , noting DSC 's improving cash flows , which have led to improved debt to equity rations .
2 He has just noticed people eating ice cream on a café terrace across the street .
3 But many apply a 5% threshold ( Poland has just adopted 7% ) before a party benefits from such a pool .
4 Professor Garrow 's studies show that a 10-stone woman who has just lost 20lb can eat the same amount — without gaining weight — as a 10-stone woman who has always weighed that amount .
5 That amount has just passed £1 billion per annum for the first time , representing a real terms increase of 2.5 per cent .
6 Mr Lamb said : ‘ The council has put nothing in the budget to celebrate the anniversary yet Bowes Museum at Barnard Castle has just got £100,000 from the county council to mark its centenary .
7 Gilder 's Haulage company has just spent £130,000 on this new lorry , but now it 's on the road to no-where .
8 Polly Peck raised half of the £560million Del Monte Fresh Fruit purchase cost through its three-for-seven rights issue , but it has just paid £69million for control of Sansui .
9 On the last day of the Sale one senior elder was heard to say in response to another 's query as to how he was faring , ‘ Well , I 've just make 40p which I 'm very pleased about ’ .
10 For instance , you 've decided to run the TriAxis through a couple of Boogie combos ( sorry , I 've just spent £4,500 for you ! ) .
11 The summer of 1984 was a glorious one , the West Indian team was one of their strongest and had just beaten Australia 3–0 ; the England team , with some of the top players banned after going to South Africa , was one of their most ordinary and had just lost series to Pakistan and New Zealand for the first time , and it was all rather one-sided .
12 Shortly before I visited Lindow Moss , Britain had just wasted £100 million in futile repairs to a submarine which is now to be scrapped .
13 Cash was flowing out quicker than it came in during 1930 and this led to the idea that a new racer could be built to earn the ‘ big money ’ at the National Air Races , where the winner had just taken $15,000 .
14 So far they have just topped £300 including VAT but the consoling thought is that if this was an aircraft with tin wings , a Lycoming engine and requiring a Certificate of Airworthiness , correcting the same faults would be at least three times as much .
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