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22 Sentences With "had for sale"

How to use had for sale in a sentence? Find typical usage patterns (collocations)/phrases/context for "had for sale" and check conjugation/comparative form for "had for sale". Mastering all the usages of "had for sale" from sentence examples published by news publications.

Here's an incredible Rory Hayes original that Scott Eder had for sale.
Then, as I was leaving, he asked if I wanted to buy one of the tchotchkes he had for sale.
It was the same material as the lap rugs they had for sale, machine woven and colorful as a magic carpet.
He soon realized that it would draw all the attention and prevent him from finding buyers for any of the other objects he had for sale.
When she told me that I, too, could be clairvoyant, if I'd only align my chakras with some of the crystals she had for sale, I left.
He also had for sale what he called a stuffed cheetah, which he claimed had come from Kandahar (Afghanistan, not Africa), an unlikely extension of its known range.
But when I asked to see the Trump masks, I was amused to see that both of the versions they had for sale were made outside the United States.
It all started in the late 22.5s, when boards of local brokers convened at their meeting halls to swap information about properties their clients had for sale, hoping to find a buyer at the highest price.
We had to make sure we could guarantee the functionality of the old gear we had for sale and it helped a lot of people who had an obsession with 70's and 80's equipment find us.
Newsletters were made up of sked lists by sport, editorial pieces, and ads from Skedders about schedules they had for sale or trade or schedules they were in search of.
In May 1892 Frida moved to Oslo and founded "Atelier for national Tæppevæving", complete with a dyeing workshop. Her knowledge about dyeing yarn was the basis for the yarn Norges Husflidslag had for sale.
"Returning to the Topic of My 1979 Visit to the Marvel Offices," Tales From the Database, MileHighComics.com (March 2004). The Rozanskis eventually sold Alternate Realities to Bud Plant in 1987. In 1980, Rozanski purchased a double-page ad in mainstream Marvel comics, listing prices for back issues he had for sale.
RetroFret's showroom is considered by many industry professionals to be one of the highest quality, museum-grade inventory displays in the United States. At one point the store had for sale country and honky-tonk musician Lefty Frizzell's 1949 Gibson Bigsby J-200, personalized with "Lefty Frizzell" on the pickguard. The guitar sold for $350,000 to country musician Merle Haggard.
In 2000 the committee gave all its 270 club members a memento to mark the turn of the century, a Welsh dragon in Trebanos colours. They also had for sale commemorative plates and tankards and celebrated throughout that season with functions at the clubhouse. In 2000 the old Pheasant Bush public house had become available and the committee decided to purchase this property. After protracted negotiations they finally purchased the building in 2001.
In 1999 Hattons launched their first website, a directory of the items that they had for sale to make it easier for people wanting to place orders via post or over the telephone to view the entire stock in one place. The same year number 182 Smithdown Road was purchased and the store expanded into both buildings. Norman semi retired in 1998 leaving the running of the business to his two children Keith (1959–2008) and Christine Hatton.
The agents accepted the note, bought the insurance, and agreed to purchase the bonds he was selling. To further boost confidence, Kelley also offered to accept canal bonds at par value in payment for any property he had for sale. Since the state's bonds were selling well below par value at the time, Kelley took considerable risk in making the offer. Kelley was forced to conceal how he had personally guaranteed the bonds and bond interest payments.
In October the following year he used the local newspaper to announce that he had for sale 'colonial salt' that was extracted from Lake Kunat Kunat by his brother-in-law Joseph Smith of L'Albert (Joseph Colmer Smith married Henry's older sister Rebecca Hickmott at Clunes on 25 August 1869. A Cornishman, he was born at St Austell in 1832, the son of Thomas Colmer Smith, a storekeeper, and Jane Rowett). Henry Edward's passion beyond his family, work and religion, was cricket.
As he knows everything that's in the warehouse and where, he leverages Pam into giving him more sick days. In "Garage Sale", Darryl, Andy and Kevin play and bet on the Dallas board game (which Kevin had for sale). Since the instruction booklet is not with the game, Darryl and Andy make up the rules as they go along, much to Kevin's objection. Eventually, Kevin notices the money they had bet on the game with is missing, and storms out.
Hayner, Don (July 26, 1987). "Big bucks in rare comics—Classic find in '77 began a new era" . Chicago Sun-Times via HighBeam Research. Retrieved November 10, 2012. In 1977, Mile High Comics consisted of three locations. In 1979 Rozanski purchased Richard Alf Comics' mail order division, with which he gained systems and methods for greatly expanding his mail order sales. In 1980, Rozanski purchased a double-page ad in mainstream Marvel comics, listing prices for back issues he had for sale.
With the extinction of the Mozzi family, the palace fell into disrepair, and was bought in 1880 by the Princess Vanda Carolath von Beuthen, then in 1913, by Stefano Bardini. The palace served as a gallery for the objects he had for sale, and a studio for his restorers. His will in 1922, required his heirs to convert his remaining collection into a cultural institution. However, feuding of heirs retarded any progress towards this purpose until 1996, when the palace was acquired by the Commune.
At the end of the episode, Dwight plants and waters the seeds and Jim secretly replaces the pots with full-grown plants. Andy Bernard (Ed Helms), Darryl Philbin (Craig Robinson), and Kevin Malone (Brian Baumgartner) play and bet on the Dallas board game, which Kevin had for sale. As the instruction booklet is not with the game, Andy and Darryl make up the rules as they go along; when Kevin objects, Andy simply claims "that's Dallas." Eventually, Kevin notices the money they had bet on the game with is missing, and storms out.
Stemming from the publishing of several Sega Genesis games by video game publisher Accolade, which had disassembled Genesis software in order to publish games without being licensed by Sega, the case involved several overlapping issues, including the scope of copyright, permissible uses for trademarks, and the scope of the fair use doctrine for computer code. The case was filed in the U.S. District Court for the Northern District of California, which ruled in favor of Sega and issued an injunction against Accolade preventing them from publishing any more games for the Genesis and requiring them to recall all the existing Genesis games they had for sale. Accolade appealed the decision to the Ninth Circuit on the grounds that their reverse engineering of the Genesis was protected under fair use. The Ninth Circuit reversed the district court's order and ruled that Accolade's use of reverse engineering to publish Genesis titles was protected under fair use, and that its alleged violation of Sega trademarks was the fault of Sega.

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