Example sentences of "have [to-vb] [prep] [noun sg] " in BNC.

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1 If the CEO or the manager of the group is held accountable for outcomes , then in the final analysis , he or she will have to agree with group decisions or have the authority to block them , which means that the group never really had decision-making power to begin with .
2 He 'll have to agree for Mum 's sake . ’
3 Proportionally , quite a lot of black teenagers become pregnant too , and they may well have to contend with racism and discrimination in many areas of their lives .
4 It was also stated that he would have to remain in hospital for around a month , and would thus be unable to attend the special session of the Diet which was scheduled to end on Dec. 8 .
5 Existing trade agreements between East Germany and east European countries ( especially the Soviet Union ) would have to remain in place for the time being , but imports under these agreements would have to be confined to the territory of East Germany .
6 Changing dates , numbers travelling or holiday type are major changes which we may have to treat as cancellation and subsequent re-booking .
7 Will they have to contract for rehabilitation services separate from the contract for acute beds ?
8 The less successful a government is in controlling the PSBR , the more it will have to borrow through bond issue to prevent money supply from growing too fast .
9 I do have to thank on behalf of my stewards ' committee er , Terry who gave us a lot of help and also the er , Regional Section who also helped us .
10 This time he did n't have to wait with trepidation for the entrance of Gesner .
11 We 'll have to wait for permission from the expatriate lady in Sweden . ’
12 Suggestive crop-marks at the point where the projected line of the defences meets the emerging east-west street have also been photographed from the air , but proof of another gate here will have to wait for excavation .
13 The user does not have to wait for interpretation , but can write ahead and subsequently correct errors .
14 ‘ I 'll just have to wait for Dad then , wo n't I ? ’
15 ‘ You 'll have to wait for morning .
16 If I could n't find it , I would have to wait for morning and steer north by my watch and the sun .
17 A trade agreement provided for a reduction of customs duties on goods traded by the two countries ( thus extending most favoured nation status to the Soviet Union and improving the competitiveness of each country 's goods in the other 's markets ) ; the agreement also provided for better copyright protection for US companies and for reductions in the time US companies would have to wait for approval to begin commercial operations in the Soviet Union .
18 But Ramsden 's ( illustrated ) did n't have to wait for television to make its name .
19 Certainly he was not waiting to see Artai — the Khan of the Merkuts was so powerful that he did not have to wait for audience like other men .
20 Sorry , you 'll have to wait for daddy 's clear .
21 Bitstream are intending to get round this limitation by getting in league with the various page description language manufacturers and producing real-time fonts through their languages but as none of these are currently delivering we will have to wait in order to judge the result .
22 Her proof is in the restaurant trade : ‘ Even fast food restaurants ( do ) not seem fast , because at home you do n't have to wait in line . ’
23 She asked , ’ What is the NHS coming to , that I should have to wait in pain , discomfort and distress for my operation ? ’
24 Well she 'll have to wait till Easter that 's all , and when she comes back at Easter time
25 MITI had hoped to get the legislation through by next month , but it now looks as if it will have to wait until autumn before the ministries have talked it over .
26 If none of them proved correct they would have to wait until dawn and call out a helicopter , by which time it would probably be too late .
27 As for the effects of the Act , an overall assessment of its impact on the use of custody will have to wait until Chapter 10 because of the need to deal also with the provisions relating to community penalties and parole .
28 A shower helped but she still felt languid and disinclined to don the gown she would soon have to wear in front of a discerning audience .
29 You do not have to continue with stage 1 exercises if you find no further need of them or you want to concentrate fully on these harder exercises !
30 ‘ We 'll just have to continue on foot , ’ she said briskly .
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