Example sentences of "[adj] have [noun] " in BNC.

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1 Historians attempt to construct their own coherent accounts of the past by the rigorous testing of evidence which is often incomplete ; the skills involved in doing this have benefits beyond the study of history ; viii ) to enrich other areas of the curriculum .
2 However , there 's a point I 'd like to make very strongly … many of you reading this have responsibilities to supervise or manage staff .
3 The most luxurious have bars , swimming pools and air-conditioned cabins .
4 Brachiopods fall into two major classes ; the more primitive have shells composed of calcium phosphate plus organic material and hinge development is imperfect — hence their name , inarticulate brachiopods .
5 Some have intaglio designs , as though for sealings .
6 Twin rooms have a front sea view and some have balcony .
7 Only some have TVs but all are served by a lift .
8 Some have auto-exposure compensation .
9 All the simply furnished rooms have private facilities and some have balconies .
10 Rooms are basically furnished , all have private facilities and some have balconies .
11 Another important group , the retired , can place significant demands on local facilities and services , but in housing terms they form a heterogeneous group since some have capital from the sale of housing in more expensive locations while others are in competition for cheaper housing , and especially for rural local authority houses and sheltered accommodation ( Law and Warnes 1976 ; Phillips and Williams 1982a ) .
12 Sarah : I 'm fixing mine into rows — some have holes and some have flat .
13 Some have holes in them , some have five tiles in them , some have six or more ( the normal ones have usually got four or less ) .
14 Some have problems , some because of their circumstances are working here .
15 For example , some have difficulties in retrieving semantic information about people ( for example their occupation ) , some have difficulties specific to the retrieval of people 's names , and some can remember old faces but can not learn new ones .
16 For example , some have difficulties in retrieving semantic information about people ( for example their occupation ) , some have difficulties specific to the retrieval of people 's names , and some can remember old faces but can not learn new ones .
17 Some have TV and there is a TV lounge .
18 Some are blue and some pink , some have pockets and some not , but they are all examples of what it means to be a shirt : they all exemplify ‘ shirtness ’ — the universal .
19 ‘ But some have difficulty reachin' the end of that road , Myles , ’ he went on .
20 Some have difficulty in writing and spelling .
21 The crêche may be located some distance away from where you will be working , and some have restrictions as to how far away you are allowed to be from your child in case you need to be contacted .
22 Some have connections which are so close to education that they can be regarded as falling inside the group of like-minded supporters .
23 Some have handles without mounts , or none at all .
24 Some have church parades to Free Presbyterian churches .
25 Some have armies and weapons because they fear that , come a war , they would need protection and defences .
26 Some have gliders which slot into grooves on the back of the track .
27 Some have mushrooms , others not ; some lard the meat , others not .
28 The fresh decor of the public rooms continues in the hotel bedrooms , all of which are equipped with a telephone , a balcony and some have sea view .
29 Some have remnants of 18th and 19th century buildings constructed in the local fashion using small boulders from the beach .
30 Some have conscript armies , others do not .
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