Example sentences of "has as [det] " in BNC.

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1 I want to say in conclusion that it has as many consequences for the devout Evangelical as it does for the hardened Catholic .
2 He has as many centuries in the two-and-a-bit years that he has been England captain as he had in all his years in the ranks .
3 He has as many centuries in the two-and-a-bit years that he has been England captain as he had in all his years in the ranks .
4 Modern witchcraft has as many ‘ denominations ’ as does Christianity and , just as a respectable high Anglo-Catholic might shrivel with embarrassment at the gregarious worship of black Pentecostals , and vice versa , there are similar reactions between various branches of witchcraft .
5 It has as many names as there are civilisations on earth .
6 No one else in the tragedies has as many soliloquies as Iago does ( not even Hamlet ) .
7 Moreover , the modern status of officially recognized ‘ languages ’ , as opposed to ‘ dialects ’ — always a controversial question — obscures the fact that , for instance , Khanty has as many as five ‘ dialects ’ which are by no means mutually comprehensible ; the far-flung Evenki Tungus have at least three groups of dialects , and their cousins the Evens as many as thirteen ; and the Nenets Samoeds of the forest have three rather different ‘ dialects ’ , although those of the tundra have a single common language .
8 The new space has as many nodes as the original , but often a lot of its nodes will not be accessible .
9 She knew instantly that he was thinking of the Father of Lies — for the Prince of Darkness has as many titles as the Prince of Wales — and she went pink .
10 The great experimental merit of Aplysia , by contrast with Drosophila , which has as many neurons , or the octopus , which has far more , is that many of the Aplysia neurons are very large — up to a millimetre or so in diameter — and they are located in characteristic and recognizable patterns , which are reproducible from animal to animal .
11 He has as many selves as he has utterances , virtual or realized , as many selves as there are words in his lexicon , even in the dictionary of his potential language , with each word its aetimology , its phoneyetic fragility and its semiantic sea changes , each word its infinite contiguities and its tall spokes of paradismatic possibilities .
12 No other subspecialty in anaesthesia has as many conflicting papers on the same subject or as many opinions as to the best way to provide analgesia/anaesthesia to the patient .
13 At £13,000 plus options ( like the CD ) , this is , short of the cabrio , the Escort/Orion flagship — thank heavens it has as much going for it as it does .
14 No matter what anyone tells you , wild salmon , at its best , has as much in common with the farmed variety as Caroline Cossey does with Mother Theresa .
15 ‘ The Andy Warhol of Spain … who thinks a Camel cigarette packet has as much value as a Picasso ’ , an artist who reckons to ‘ make cultural sandwiches for the brain ’ .
16 ‘ International Communism has as much or as little significance as the Commonwealth . ’
17 The decline of countries has as much to do with the loss of vision as any other factor .
18 The wildlife that we so carelessly destroy has as much right to be on the planet as us and should be respected — we still have much to learn about them .
19 This act has as much relevance as trading on a dead beetle . ’
20 All report a passionate directness of response that they attribute to the setting and the pathology of the patients , but which probably has as much to do with social class .
21 The novice flyer will normally require that the model 's response to the transmitter is at a minimum , to avoid any tendency to overcontrol , while the gyro has as much effect as possible to help him during the learning process .
22 In this model , the male has as much interest in forming a stable family unit as the female and gets just as broody .
23 ‘ The beast has as much food as he wants .
24 Inner conflict has as much potential for good as it does evil , for the conflicts experienced provide opportunities for mature choices , as well as self-luxuriating indulgences .
25 PRODUCED BY Peter Buck , which ai n't such a recommendation in itself , since an REM by-line has as much rarity these days as a Steve Albini credit or the legend ‘ from Seattle ’ , but Uncle Tupelo are pretty magnificent , as it happens .
26 This has as much to do with the aural texture of guitar-based rock as with funk or soul , and their records often fail to gain airplay on rap specialist radio shows .
27 That Miro is not as well known as his contemporaries Picasso and Dali has as much to do with personality as with art .
28 Capital flight has as much to do with political structures as with a loss of confidence .
29 ‘ generally speaking a prosecutor has as much right as a defendant to demand a verdict of a jury on an outstanding indictment , and where either demands a verdict a judge has no jurisdiction to stand in the way of it .
30 However , we remind ourselves of the principles outlined earlier in this judgment and the observation of Lord Morris of Borth-y-Gest in Connelly v. Director of Public Prosecutions [ 1964 ] A.C. 1254 , 1304 , that ‘ generally speaking a prosecutor has as much right as a defendant to demand a verdict of a jury on an outstanding indictment , and where either demands a verdict a judge has no jurisdiction to stand in the way of it . ’
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