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6 Sentences With "had need to"

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

Conversations like the one Amara and Young Hollywood had need to happen, so we can continue to debunk the bullshit... and hopefully, Amara will continue to use her new platform to do so.
Thereafter, the theater had need to reform their presentation. The Soviet authorities developed a deep distrust of Tairov, calling him the last representative of the "bourgeois aestheticism". In 1937, the Realistic Theater was merged with the Kamerny. In World War II, the theater was heavily bombed during the siege of Moscow and it did not re-open until December 25, 1943.
Preserved housing originally built for the railway workers. The Works transformed Swindon from a small 2,500 population market town into a bustling railway town. Built to the north of the main town centre, the works had need to build locally accessible housing and services for the workers. The development of the railway village was on the lines of similar Victorian-era socially-encompassing lifestyle concepts, such as that at Bournville, but architect/builder Rigby's were given license to create a commercially viable development by the GWR.
After the English Restoration, Spragge was pardoned by Charles II and rewarded for his loyalty by being made captain of HMS Drake. Whenever Charles had need to send an envoy to the Spanish Netherlands, he often employed Spragge because of his good contacts there. His first sea-fight with the Dutch was the Battle of Lowestoft in 1665, after which he was knighted on board of HMS Royal Charles for his gallant conduct as captain of the Lion (52), under Prince Rupert of the Rhine, who greatly favoured his career. Spragge was then given command of the Triumph (72).
In his Spectator review, A. N. Wilson describes Lost and Found as Julian Gloag’s “Sweet Revenge” for the perceived plagiarism of Our Mother’s House by Ian McEwan in The Cement Garden. Set entirely in France, the story features Paul Molphey, a schoolteacher and writer of roughly Gloag's age. As a young man, Paul writes a novel and sends it off, hearing nothing. Many years later, he discovers that an upcoming writer, Jean-Pierre Montbarbon (who is roughly McEwan's age) has won a prize for his new novel. Paul reads the novel and finds it to be his own, reproduced almost verbatim: “He turned back to the beginning and started again, although he hardly had need to read.
As in many medieval Islamic cities, the main souk streets of Fes typically run from the city's main gates to the area of the city's main mosque (in this case the Qarawiyyin and, to a lesser extent, the Zawiya of Moulay Idris II, historically known as the Shurafa Mosque), which, in turn, lies at the center of the city's main commercial and economic zones. The souk streets themselves constitute the main commercial axes of the city and are home to most of its foundouks (inns for merchants). As a result, merchants and foreign visitors rarely had need to wander outside these areas and most of the streets branching off them lead only to local residential lanes (often called derbs), many of them leading to dead-ends. Even today, tourists are generally found only on these main commercial thoroughfares.

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