Example sentences of "had [to-vb] into [noun sg] " in BNC.

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1 you got yo would have to take and hour or take two hours , or take three hours and if you take up to three hours or if you got three separate hours that was detention and if we were in our in the junior part of the school in the first three forms erm , you then had to go into school on Saturday morning .
2 In the senior school we had to go into school Saturday morning anyway !
3 The furniture you got was just little bits and pieces you could get hold of , and you had to go into debt for it .
4 But the smile disappeared to be replaced by a doleful frown when she had to go into dinner herself — and sit next to her husband .
5 Gran told her that mum had to go into hospital because she was hysterical ! !
6 Soon after I got my English A-level , mum learned that she had to go into hospital for quite a long time .
7 Old Miss Mahoney had a little house in Tanner Road , but she had to go into hospital last week , and if she ever comes out , she 'll have to go into a home for old people .
8 Well I 'm supposed to have Wednesday mornings that was the arrangement , Wednesday then I had to go into hospital
9 Peter Shillinglaw , secretary of New Brighton Lifeboat which had to go into action a few times , said : ‘ I can not help but think the organisers of this race have been very , very lucky over the years . ’
10 You had to go into politics if you wanted to change the world .
11 Brenner was willing ; Scholz had to go into town himself .
12 In short , a European parliament still had to come into existence .
13 I had to come into town anyway ; it was only a short detour to your place .
14 She had to walk into work tomorrow and face her colleagues .
15 Even Stella , McIllvanney 's long-suffering secretary , had taken the day off , leaving the office locked , which meant I had to walk into town to find a public telephone from which I called the Bahamian Police and told them about Hirondelle , and added that I had rescued a chart and a handful of cartridges from the stricken boat .
16 However , his ultimate intentions must remain doubtful because in September Warwick and Clarence invaded with French backing and Edward and his brother had to flee into exile in the Low Countries .
17 However , his ultimate intentions must remain doubtful because in September Warwick and Clarence invaded with French backing and Edward and his brother had to flee into exile in the Low Countries .
18 She did n't know how she was going to do it , but somehow she had to get into conversation with her .
19 He did so now , read it , and was so disturbed that he had to drop into Cat 's Coffee Shop to sit down .
20 I still found the argument extraordinary , but I also had to take into account the fact that if Nigel retained this stance then the committee meeting would have to be postponed and the whole exercise would get off to a terrible start .
21 This was partly for ease of administration by the development officers who had to take into account the cost of all the services received by the elderly person when designing a package of care , but primarily because this was a new initiative : by enabling the development officers to take on difficult and complex cases without being unduly restricted by considerations of cost , it was hoped to test the limits to this form of community care .
22 However , this £200 had to take into account the expense of all the other public revenue services received by the client : the costs of the other services were deducted from the notional £200 and the residue could be used to buy in extra home support . ’
23 For Luther only truth needed to be considered : Cranmer had to take into account the fact that the majority of the English population were probably still Catholics at heart .
24 In deciding what procedures to use the project team had to take into account the fact that few of the schools associated with the study were likely to have moved towards a Cockcroft curriculum .
25 In so deciding , he had to take into account the fact that it was plain that Wickes would , unless restrained , continue to act in contravention of section 47 of the Shops Act 1950 ; and that , in practical terms , proceedings by way of injunction were the only means open to the council to perform its duty to enforce the provisions of section 47 .
26 The deputy judge had to take into account also the other evidence relevant to the issue of testamentary competence .
27 Held , dismissing the appeals , that failure to observe the proper procedures for service was not necessarily fatal to the lawfulness of a committal order ; that the court , in exercising its discretion under section 13(3) of the Administration of Justice Act 1960 , had to take into account the interests not only of the contemnor but also of those affected by the contempt and the need to maintain its authority , and that where an irregularity caused the contemnor no injustice the committal order should not be set aside ; that since , in the first appeal , there was no requirement for personal service of a committal order so that the only irregularity was that the court , rather than the local authority had served a copy of the order on the contemnor 's solicitors , the contemnor had suffered no injustice and the order would stand ; and that , in the second appeal , since the husband was fully aware of the findings of contempt and had not sought to challenge them or the sentence imposed , he had suffered no injustice and it was appropriate in the circumstances to affirm the order despite the irregularities which had occurred ( post , pp. 822B–C , F — 823B , 823C–E , 824B–D , F , 825C–D , 826D–F ) .
28 On the surface Caesar appeared to be a supremely selfish individual , but then she had to take into account that having virtue he had no need of goodness .
29 In it , the Welsh Office stated that a solution for Wales had to take into account four major factors which distinguished it from England : the Welsh Office had been responsible for public sector higher education in Wales since 1978 ; the scale of the problem was quite different in that only eight local authorities and a small number of colleges were involved ; the Regional Advisory Council for the whole of Wales , the WJEC , was made up of these local authorities ; and it did not make sense , either on economic or educational grounds , to expect colleges in Wales to provide as wide a range of provision as would be expected in England .
30 When running a football club one had to take into account the overall strength of the squad , and , to quote Norman Hunter ‘ Leeds is overloaded with midfield players and this is a good deal for the club ’ .
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