Example sentences of "have [adv] [verb] a bit " in BNC.
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1 | Now if anyone asks if you feel for any sense that perhaps some of these routines have perhaps got a bit of become inappropriate in some way , perhaps because you 're teaching a different type of child , or perhaps because you 've got rather different educational aims , they 've changed for some reason , then it 's like asking someone to go back to being a novice again in some senses to change . |
2 | ‘ They have already had a bit of excitement , while the rest of the country has had to put up with the phoney war . ’ |
3 | There was a game on then … but Chesterfield had other ideas … they looked a smart outfit while United have still got a bit of catching up to do … the third goal from Norris highlighted the difference between the two teams … |
4 | ‘ What tends to happen , ’ he explains , ‘ is that bands which are good have also got a bit more wit and charm than the regular outfit . |
5 | What tends to happen is that bands which are good have also got a bit more wit and charm than the regular outfit |
6 | Three so she 'd say , Oh you know mind I 've cut it up a bit do you you should n't it 's still a quarter still a quarter you have n't lost a bit of it but it 's still a quarter three twelfths is the same as a quarter . |
7 | ‘ Hello , old man , you have n't changed a bit in 35 years , ’ says the colonel . |
8 | ‘ You have n't changed a bit . |
9 | Well they have n't aged a bit , but maybe that 's because I have . |
10 | Your dad will be in soon and I have n't got a bit of food on . ’ |
11 | Who can honestly say they have never done a bit of work off-the-books or used the services of somebody who was doing so ? |