We have no meanings for "have a cross" in our records yet.
1 And she mustn't have a cross face, and mustn't wear spectacles.'
2 May I have a cross ? ' And then louder: 'A cross!
3 But I have a cross husband, and that is a great grief to me.
4 We don't have a cross here, so we'll have to do the best we can.
5 A surly man will be very likely to have a cross dog and a biting horse.
6 Executive director Julien Leys said it made sense to have a cross - industry plan for private managed isolation.
7 With the advent of e-books in the Outland, this is not a good time to have a cross - genre war.
8 Sometimes they have a cross -belt also; and occasionally both this and the girdle round the waist are richly fringed.
10 Natalie Kingham, the buyer at Matches, told me that Hay's clothes have a cross - generational appeal, and are easy to layer.
11 Apricots make the best preserves and canned fruit, so with these easy-to-make poached fruits, you delightfully have a cross between the two.
12 Saint-Lusson had a cross erected with a post bearing the king's arms.
13 Norton, a former US marine, had a cross - armed defensive style that troubled Ali.
14 One that I saw had a cross emblazoned on the diminutive judge's chest.
15 It seemed someone upstairs had a cross to bear against this humble burg.
16 Turning to Massieu, she asked him if he had a cross .
Other examples for "have a cross"
Grammar, pronunciation and more
This collocation consists of: Have a cross through the time