Example sentences of "have [verb] them [det] " in BNC.

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1 They were both straining to reach , leaning forward as far as they could , agonisingly aware that the door and its ring handle that might have given them some leverage were out of their reach , when another sound fell on their ears .
2 This should have given them several useful advantages , including the right to trial by jury .
3 You should have heard them all .
4 We 'd have sorted them all out in the tunnel ! ’
5 You 'll have to try them both .
6 It was my impression that slightly casual management may have turned them all to vinegar .
7 . Er well I 'll put those down , so let's find some of these because obviously you wo n't have met them all , maybe .
8 Do you have to tip them all out Anthony Mark ?
9 We 'll have to pick them all pretty sharpish .
10 You will have used them all .
11 You should have used them both together should n't you ?
12 Something which as the Argentines were in no circumstances , ah , going to settle for , ah , and anybody could have told them that , and anybody knew that .
13 As a matter of fact , any reader of the Daily Worker could have told them that .
14 You should have told them that about the poppy seeds .
15 She could n't go back and face them all — not now , not when Marianne would have told them all about her criminal father , doubtless revelling in every sad little detail , probably creating a few more just to spice the story up still more .
16 He had braved the bitter weather to go down to the bookshops on the Charing Cross Road not just for the chance to get some books — he could have bought them any time — but principally to meet Joseph Hyde and hear the latest news from Dublin .
17 The manager would have had them all in at 8 a.m. , forcing them to try on the latest zipper tops over their Iron Maiden T-shirts , and making them practise slouching around the sales floor trying to look cool in clothes designed to save lives in sub-zero temperatures .
18 Well they were highly formal , they , and I would n't have had them any other way .
19 In the future we wo n't be able to just do things , we 'll have to experience them all the time .
20 ’ You might at least have sold them that information , ’ I snarled .
21 You must have got them all spread
22 A little foresight might have shown them that spending less on early hospitality and a bit more on the venue would have saved them time , money and trouble overall .
23 you 'll have to do them all you 'll have to undo
24 They were n't used to the cheek-by-jowl contact it entailed ; the notion of living in the state of interdependence that bound Dora Lavender and Rose Kettle would have horrified them both .
25 But I do n't have to fill them all .
26 Do you have to give them all back ?
27 of getting i the some sort of a working a relationship a at a more detailed where in between , we 're between the staff the teaching staff and the tutor , the form tutors help the teaching staff , especially and say in your department where you you 're gon na have to give them more homework .
28 And then adding all these up , well there 's none of them that add up that we can just add in to any of the others , so we 'll have to leave them all like that , so the answer is just a , a thousand , plus a hundred Y plus ten X , plus X Y. Now if we wanted to multiply , let's say we want to multiply a hundred and three by seventeen , that just means that X is seven , sorry X is three and Y is seven .
29 I 'm sure she ca n't have remembered them all . ’
30 They would have arrested them both , delighted to pick on a friar .
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