Example sentences of "[verb] have a new [noun] [prep] " in BNC.

  Next page
No Sentence
1 When he met him in the office , or on the stairs , his habitually offensive glance seemed to have a new dimension of thoughtfulness .
2 Is the list going to have a new name from Northern Ireland added to it this season ?
3 It was planted for generations to supply the strong bows for archers but now appears to have a new role as a protector — in the fight against cancer .
4 Novell hopes to have a new version of DR DOS out by the middle of this year .
5 It 's interesting to note that actually now we 've since made that decision the residual has as I 've said come down to nine four seven , so if we do have a new settlement of fourteen hundred we 're already ending up with a a higher level of proposed development for Greater York now , the nine seven would obviously be exceeded if we had a fourteen hundred new settlement within Greater York .
6 Since Rosie 's return to the Watermen , Patrick had had a new lease of life .
7 The King 's Men had to have a new play for a special day like that .
8 He had to have a new battery for it , and two of the tyres were n't legal .
9 My mouth 's had a new life since that day .
10 So it 's had a new lease of life with that has n't it ?
11 I du n no cos it 's had a new exhaust on it .
12 One way in which gender , ethnicity and class have been seen to fit together is as a consequence of capitalist social relations : women are exploited in the workplace because of the benefit that employers derive from this , and in the home because employers need to have a new generation of workers produced as cheaply as possible .
13 That is why we have to have a new basis for valuation , a capital values tax .
  Next page