Example sentences of "have to come [prep] [adj] [noun] " in BNC.

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1 Have to has to come into common use before it gets into the dictionary .
2 The success of such authors has probably contributed to the view that the inspiration for postmodernism in Britain has often had to come from foreign models rather than a native tradition of this form of writing , or even much of a disposition towards it .
3 There are also mobile teams who travel to outlying communities so that people do not all have to come to one centre .
4 Young Anna is going to be well heeled but she will have to come to some arrangement with Beryl and Beryl would prefer , much , to deal with the devil himself .
5 And then if er you want a so solicitor with you on that day we 'll have to come to some arrangement with you privately about the costs .
6 ‘ Surely she does n't have to come through this lot to go to her flat ? ’
7 So any increase in output will have to come from better farming methods , particularly in countries like India , whose rice farmers lag well behind Japan 's in productivity .
8 New roads that would need to be provided would therefore have to come from that direction and and it itself will cut a swathe through the open countryside .
9 The priorities for the deaf community will have to come from deaf people themselves but the effective use of Total Communication by deaf and hearing people offers a way towards a sharing of views .
10 The money would have to come from another source .
11 Even so , the bulk of the increase would have to come from improved yields , as it has in the past three decades .
12 Domestic consumption fell by 1 per dent ‘ whereas we thought it would be up by 1 per cent ’ said Dicks , and he reaffirmed his belief that ‘ recovery would have to come from domestic consumption ’ .
13 The impetus will have to come from older people themselves .
14 I had to come round this way this morning to get to Whitehall It 's just so chock-a-block on that new ro roadway .
15 It had to come from some distance away since over the centuries the trees and bushes on both sides of the river had been lopped down .
16 We have to come to some kind of deal with the trade unions in this complex interim period .
17 but which have to come with numerical evidence .
18 Lack of money is holding them back — new sounds have to come from fresh effects pedals rather than a sampling machine — but the ambitions are burning : ‘ I do n't think we actually achieve the crossover , ’ admits Sam , with a who-gives-a-flying- f— -shrug , ‘ but that 's certainly what we want to do . ’
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