Example sentences of "we have at [noun sg] " in BNC.
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1 | How many vacancies do we have at present ? |
2 | ‘ In the end the collection we had at home was mainly classical because those were the works that did n't sell very well . |
3 | Which is what we had at home in the manor ground , our squire was er |
4 | It 's better than what we had at Christmas |
5 | Christ does care about the details of how we conduct ourselves in all these situations , because the standards we have at work either honour him or dishonour him . |
6 | the Easter vac , you know , but it 's really basically a week we have at Easter and |
7 | a word anything that we have at home , such as your little carving that you had done . |
8 | Again , it 's a questin of matching the kit to the age of the child because some of them erm — the one we have at home , for example , plugs into the mains and although it only pushes out six or nine volts at the end the child actually does have to plug it in and , well I do n't think I 'd be happy if my six or seven year old was doing that , although my nine year old could cope with it quite happily . |
9 | Again , it 's a question of matching the kit to the age of the child because some of them erm — the one we have at home , for example , plugs into the mains and although it only pushes out six or nine volts at the end the child actually does have to plug it in and , well I do n't think I 'd be happy if my six or seven year old was doing that , although my nine year old could cope with it quite happily . |
10 | We have at home our coal store , or our central heating fuel tank . |
11 | That implies the establishment of some form of institute — if that is not too grandiose a word — some form of organisation , more permanent than a one week ad hoc seminar , such as we have at present . |
12 | This gives an indication of the ambient blood glucose level over the previous two or three months and is the best single indicator we have at present of glycaemic control . |
13 | ‘ If that report is anywhere near accurate , they could knock anything we have at present clear out of the sky . |
14 | This observation suggests a framework for linking network studies with larger-scale class-based studies in formulating a more coherent multi-level sociolinguistic theory than we have at present . |
15 | So by some means we must devise solutions that produce at least what we have at present ; that is to say , the £27,000 million which the Inland Revenue collected by direct taxation . |
16 | ‘ Hopefully VR may be an overlay on the reality we have at present ; enhancing it but not replacing it . |
17 | It is fairly evident that the widely spread limestones and dolomites of chapter 1 are , at least in part , explicable in terms of a wider tropical belt than we have at present . |
18 | I should be happy to add that training scheme to the many other excellent training schemes we have at present . |
19 | To achieve an export-import balance under current Tory policies would mean an even worse slump than we have at present because the only thing made in Britain under the Tories is a Tory-made recession . |
20 | So let us promote better health for the population that we have at present instead of experimenting with high-cost technology . |
21 | the City Council 's remains as efficient as possible , and erm most all the posts that we have at present , we believe are necessary , but we do continue to monitor them and see whether it is necessary to continue to employ all the people that we are employing at the moment . |
22 | Now take the 11 outlined letters and unscramble them to find something else we have at Christmas . |
23 | What we have at hand is therefore of major importance — the first complete recording ( running to four hours ! ) of one of Handel 's very greatest operas . |
24 | ‘ The beauty of this system is that you do n't have to leave your desk to find out about the whole wealth of information we have at hand . ’ |
25 | The audiocassette and the videocassette have made it possible for us to have at hand and easily transport unlimited numbers of programmes in voice and vision , whether for instruction or entertainment , for a more complete understanding of news and information , or for the appreciation of beauty and artistry . |