Example sentences of "have [prep] [art] [noun] " in BNC.

  Next page
No Sentence
1 Dressed as they would have during the revolution . ’
2 Although they would try to work that out by saying , for example , erm , we would have during the course of the day , to interview somebody from , you know , so many males , so many females , so many in this age group , so many in that age group , so many who perhaps , I do n't know whether they go down to look at your address , or or whatever .
3 And you know what he 'd have for a treat ?
4 Your licence we 'll have for a year .
5 In my view the idea of his being monkish , or that he could have for a moment dreamt of entering a monastery , is not to be entertained , despite the claim of the Reverend William Levy in his Memoir .
6 Often employees are moved around an organization with the same consideration that one would have for a table or chair .
7 The sort of questions which can be asked concern both the role of coins themselves and the wider implications they may have for an understanding of a particular society .
8 Finally , through an examination of the work of Leon Duguit , we will assess the contribution which sociological positivism may have for an understanding of government and law .
9 Locke , although not opposed to corporal punishment as a final sanction , nor indeed for very young children of an age too tender to be reasoned with , in order to instil the necessary fear and awe that a child should have for an adult , strongly disapproved of beating once formal education had begun , just as he was equally opposed to bribing the child to work through material rewards .
10 What implications does this have for the cities ?
11 Spycatcher lawyer Malcolm Turnbull said : ‘ Australians are passionately proud of their country , and , no matter what respect they might have for the Queen , they want their country 's symbols to be Australian . ’
12 Little accurate information is available on population sizes in the middle ages but such evidence as we do have for the UK suggests that there was a six- or sevenfold increase between AD 1100 and 1780 , with alternating lengthy periods of rapid and slow growth .
13 The Assembly elections of 1973 served as a guide to the Convention elections which was an advantage to the participants which they did not have for the Assembly elections themselves .
14 Leading up on this as the members state at the E C , I believe we should not only have for the benefits of the European legislation to protect employees , but also to seek , form and strengthen links with the European union .
15 This gives the commission powers in London that it does not have for the rest of the country , where listed building controls are exercised only by district councils or the secretary of state .
16 At the same time it also illustrates the practical purpose narrative theory may have for the reading of individual works of literature .
17 The Department may make allowances for other expenses which you may have for the upkeep of the property .
18 ‘ What shall we have for the picnic ? ’ he asked .
19 Except , he could have for the minibus of course .
20 The task of child protection is , in a sense , the other side of the coin and one that can not be made easy for social workers , despite the sharper and hopefully more effective legal tools they will now have for the job .
21 Four members of the sprint squad missed the bus and arrived at the stadium later than they should have for the morning heats .
22 But having spent all his career in a family business , Sir Adrian has inevitably given a lot of thought to the responsibility a company should have for the community in which it operates .
23 And what of the marital relationship , how much meaning and importance does this still have for the partners ?
24 I am merely reporting on the fate to have befallen every other Minister for Sport you can care to mention which is one of the reasons why we are still debating the kind of football stadiums we should have for the future when every other country besides Botswana and the Cocos Islands have already built theirs .
25 CPRW believes that in electing to determine this application , the Secretary of State for Wales has quite correctly recognised the important implications which the decision will ultimately have for the future of National Parks .
26 All right then , what hopes do you have for the future of both Seb and Carrie ? ’
27 Because we have so many cameras I can have for the editing a great many possibilities ; and if we have filmed the music properly in the first place we can already have created some very important effects just with one shot — the violins may have the principal melody with an important counter-melody or harmonic detail in the violas , so we might shoot the passage in such a way that we have the violin bows in the foreground , the conductor , and the violas clearly focused as the third element in the shot .
28 ‘ ( 1 ) A recognised body shall not have as a member any person who is not a solicitor , a registered foreign lawyer or a recognised body .
29 ( 1 ) A recognised body shall not have as a member any person who is not a solicitor , a registered foreign lawyer or a recognised body .
30 I am immensely relieved — she had a terrible anxiety feeling , and the move might have killed her altogether , and must have as a writer , I think .
  Next page