312 examples of one have to in sentences

"It is a pity you have no brood of your own to bring up, Philip, as lively as mine, and each child entirely different from the others, so that one has to be urged to a thing that another has to be kept from.

Mama also says that one has to go to see sick people and bring them things, because it cheers them up.

But the misfortune is that one has to live, and how could I have kept the little fellow in that tiny shop of mine, where from morning till night I never have a moment to spare!

Basically one has to hold the tail with one hand and control the snake using the snake hook (a long stick with an iron hook at the end) with the other.

One has to mind one's p's and q's," said Lady Belstone.

One has to stand it in boiling water until the last second.

One has to think about the children.

Time has dealt hardly with the paint, and one has to study minutely before Medusa's horrors are visible.

The better one's condition is, the less one has to think about growing better, and the more unconsciously one's natural instincts guide the right way.

One has to write in one's own way or not at all.' 'Anyhow,' said Clare, 'it's going to be a ripping book, Socialist Cecily; quite one of your best, mother.' Clare had always been her mother's great stand-by in the matter of literature.

In parishes (which are the world) one has to endure it, accept it.

Even the rocks, over which one has to climb, and sometimes crawl, are covered with a sooty slime, which gives one the appearance, when daylight returns, of having been smeared with lamp-black.

"'If one has to have a millstone he should choose it with discretion,' I said.

One has to ask at grocers' shops, groggeries, market-stalls, Chinese restaurants; interview corner cobblers, ragpickers, gutter children.

One has to respect appearances," with a dry smile.

"To Write and Speak correctly, gives a Grace, and gains a favourable Attention to what one has to say: And since 'tis English, that an English Gentleman will have constant use of, that is the Language he should chiefly Cultivate, and wherein most care should be taken to polish and perfect his Stile.

" "Ah, and does one have to preserve appearances even in such matters as parricide?" "But certainly it looks much better for Father to be supposed to die of indigestion.

Yet it seems to me that music for the understanding of which one has to be a professor of the Conservatorium, and for which people intellectually developed, let alone simple folk, do not possess the key, is not what it ought to be.

I crush down within me the desire every one has to prove the truth of his opinion.

[Illustration] Tar being a pseudo liquid fuel, in arranging for its combustion one has to provide for the 20 to 25 per cent.

No one has to attend to his duties so regularly all the year round as the man who looks after cows.

One has to carry off the excitement, somehow.

One has to risk dangers in the world, but one makes the risk as little as possible.

There was no place where a man could hide unless he lay flat in the clover; and what occasion would any one have to thus seek concealment?

"Men of his years do these things sometimes," she said, "under the mask of playfulness and fatherly feeling, and, however unpleasant it may be to bear them, one has to pass them over.

312 examples of  one have to  in sentences