Example sentences of "[noun sg] often have " in BNC.

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1 When she joined me-after we 'd met while she was still an undercover FedPol investigator — she sternly announced that she was coming into the firm for the sake of the money , and because the job offered interest and challenge without the lethal risks that a FedPol agent often had to run .
2 The card often has its own processor , typically on 80186 or 80188 , and it can relieve the main CPU of some of the donkey work of controlling a hard disk .
3 In the United States the President often has to work hard to create a majority to support his proposed legislation in its passage through Congress .
4 But , as here , this mimicry often has the effect of comparing such experts with soothsayers , challenging the contemporary distinction between rational knowledge generated out of numbers and graphs and the irrational predictions of those who ‘ fraudcast ’ on evidence from stars or the entrails of animals .
5 The protector often has powers to prevent trustees from doing things and may even have the power to remove trustees .
6 Thus law often has a dual role to play , not only providing the basis for the ‘ smooth ’ functioning of society , but also forming part of an interrelated system which functions to provide legitimacy , cohesion , integration and unity .
7 Because of the division of labour , work soon became the perpetual repetition of a simple task , or the minding of a machine ; such work often had to be done for fourteen hours a day , six days a week , and there were no special provisions for the women and very young children who were considered especially suitable for work in the textile industries .
8 It must be remembered that the work often has to be moved by hand .
9 O. clavigera can easily be distinguished from O. globifera by the following characters : the plates of the dorsal side are thin not as well developed as in O. globifera ; the spinelets of O. clavigera often have an enlarged rugose tip , those of O. globifera are all of one kind , low and rugose , nearly granuliform ; the apical and oral papillae of O. globifera are shorter and not as rugose as those of O. clavigera ; the oral shield is more regularly rhombic in O. globifera than O. clavigera and the tentacles scales of O. globifera are large rounded while those of O. clavigera are small and spine-like .
10 On the other hand , graduates with a joint degree often have an even wider range of employment opportunities .
11 The landlords of this period often had a bond of sympathy with their tenants in that they too had to struggle for a living , and that their living conditions , especially in the tenth and early eleventh centuries , were not widely different .
12 However , working class wives living on the new housing estates of the inter-war period often had little but housework to occupy their days and , like many suburban middle class wives , tended to lead extremely isolated lives .
13 It is obvious that , not only is it necessary for students with disabilities to have reasonable transport , but that their transport often has to be specially adapted .
14 Decisions of this nature often have long-term consequences .
15 The nationalist leader often had to invent a unifying culture as well as lead .
16 Consistent poor aim often has a reason .
17 Because obesity often has its roots in childhood and adolescent experiences , it can be extremely difficult to overcome later .
18 As a general rule , a purchaser often has more freedom and grounds to withdraw from a transaction than a reasonably committed vendor .
19 A product often has little value in the marketplace in isolation from its design .
20 Unfortunately , unless the device is skilfully earthed the shielding often has little effect .
21 The church planting team often has an obvious opportunity to get involved with secular organisations in that it will often meet in a secular building .
22 Physicians in public service often have several jobs to provide an adequate income .
23 Business people who enter the public service often have unrealistic expectations about the relationship with politicians .
24 The Second Sonata often has a Spanish flavour also found in good measure in No. 3 , and explained in part by her move to Barcelona in 1924 : She lived there until Gramatté 's death in 1929 .
25 The Wealden clays supported a richer , more diverse agriculture than the Hastings Beds formation , where impoverished sandy soils combined with abrupt contours largely restricted farming to stock keeping , and grain often had to be brought from elsewhere .
26 People stuck in an aggressive pattern of behaviour often have a very strong desire to win and will do all sorts of things to achieve this .
27 All the drivers are exciting , and people who are stuck in this pattern of behaviour often have an incentive to stay in it — they feel that one day they will succeed , they will finally be perfect , they will at last please everyone ; they will prove that they can get everything done more quickly than everyone else , and they 'll know that they can undertake anything under the most difficult conditions .
28 Additionally , the elderly person often has a strong wish to tidy up , to leave things in good order .
29 But at the same time this form of contact can seem to other policemen and women as skiving , as even one member of the public described it to the field-worker ( FN 17/12/87 ) , p. 6 ) , although such a caricature obscures the fact that the contact often has a more meaningful purpose .
30 Though the city seems to dominate much of his thought at this time , in 1930 appeared his translation of St-John Perse 's Anabase where Christianity and mysticism often have a distinctly tribal feeling .
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