Example sentences of "[verb] that [pers pn] has [adj] [noun] " in BNC.
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1 | He says he has confidence in all aspects of the Havant business and , despite IBM Europe assertions of over-capacity adds that he has full order books . |
2 | ‘ My husband has married only once , ’ she told me ‘ but he has forgotten that he has any duties . ’ |
3 | Staff at the Commission have claimed that it has insufficient funds to do this . |
4 | ‘ I realise that he has considerable problems . |
5 | Talking to a tobacconist I found that he has some women customers and a range of smaller pipes for them to choose from . |
6 | But if an incident has occurred involving violence or which leads to a soured atmosphere at work , management may consider that it has little option but to take action . |
7 | However , the Hon. Member for Caernarfon ( Mr. Wigley ) was called twice , so I do not think that he has any cause for complaint . |
8 | Edinburgh District Council have been consulted and officials from their Planning Department have looked at the route and agreed that it has good potential . |
9 | Edinburgh District Council have been consulted and officials from their Planning Department have looked at the route and agreed that it has good potential . |
10 | I 've noticed that she has good bladder control . |
11 | Your daughter does n't live extravagantly enough for it to be noticed that she has more money than the average student . |
12 | KPMG warrants and undertakes that it has full power and authority under the Financial Services Act 1986 and otherwise to make the Offer on behalf of Client . |
13 | If she complains of stress incontinence but denies any urgency or urge incontinence her doctor can safely assume that she has genuine stress incontinence . |
14 | Legacies can also be sought more easily if the organisation can show that it has charitable status . |
15 | Once it is assumed that the third party would be liable to the plaintiffs for damages of a particular kind , it must follow that he has some responsibility for those damages . |
16 | This exhibition shows that he has other strings to his artistic bow . |
17 | Moreover , if we explore the course of English Literature , if we consider from what source its stream has sprung , by what tributaries it has been fed , and with how rich and full current it has come down to us , we shall see that it has other advantages not to be found elsewhere . |
18 | ’ We did a great deal on behalf of Nicholas Brown and are very surprised to hear that he has any complaints about the Foreign Office . |
19 | Looking at his reflection a child sees that he has two eyes and one nose , that his mouth is lower than his nose , his ears are at each side of his head . |
20 | Does my right hon. Friend accept that he has considerable sympathy on this side of the House and in the country , especially as there is now some doubt about whether the judge had the power to make the order that he made ? |
21 | My husband has been told that he has high cholesterol . |
22 | ‘ Frank S again showed that he has that combination of speed and strength that first team coach Egil Olsen is looking for . |
23 | If appraisal now reveals that it has some validity in principle , the next stage is application . |
24 | I know that he has first-hand experience of the benefits of GM schools , as the school that used to be known as Wold Newton transferred to grant-maintained status a few months ago and is showing the way and what can be achieved as a result of a move to grant-maintained status . |
25 | She even pretends that she has higher principles than many of the other characters in the play : |
26 | Dr Peter Simpson , formerly regional medical officer in Mersey region , and Ainna Fawcett Henesy , director of nursing in South East Thames region , have joined the group to ensure that it has open channels of communication with the professions . |
27 | Moreover , I believe that he has another reason for clinging to the A level concept . |
28 | Many artists are now drawn to it , and find that it has other attractions than the records of the burial of kings : they love to paint the children who come to meet the tourist with wave-worn pebbles from the sacred isle , and also the scenery of Mull , and the many lochs that indent that isle of bold headlands and rugged mountains masses , as they are seen from Iona . |
29 | It is popularly assumed that it has medicinal benefits , but there is no evidence whatever to support this , and much evidence to the contrary . |
30 | A ‘ desperate ’ candidate stands much less chance than a more relaxed candidate who goes into the interview knowing that she/he has other options . |