Example sentences of "[noun] [adv] have [noun sg] [prep] [noun] " in BNC.
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1 | Newman especially had faith in Whitaker as the ideal weaver of Doctor Who stories . |
2 | Like phonemes themselves , words only have significance in relation to other words and as part of a total system of classification . |
3 | Jean alone had evidence of Dr Crane 's last meeting with Eliza . |
4 | Regan ( 1977 ) complains about the lack of statistics on their background but says there are still some subject areas where inspectors only have experience of grammar and independent schools . |
5 | Schools already have access to Prestel and other hosts using the same equipment . |
6 | Ian Wright also had food for thought as he made a hasty exit from Arsenal 's demoralised dressing room . |
7 | Most pupils are now familiar with the teletext information pages on television 's Ceefax and Oracle facilities and many schools now have access to Prestel ( see Chapter 7 ) . |
8 | Seven months later , on October 6th 1905 , the Standard updated the situation revealing en passant that the Cricket Club had recently acquired the field it has today , and in which the Golf Club happily has access for car parking . |
9 | Inner London authorities normally had access to funds via Central Personnel/Management Budgets , for example : |
10 | Soviet commanders already have Foxhound in service , and another two types of fighter with similar abilities will soon follow . |
11 | The Swedes ' 3-1 victory over Albania yesterday left Robson mildly disappointed but England still had control of Group Two , he said . |
12 | I mean er and as I say you had everything erm when er I wanted coal I mean you had coal erm because after my husband ceased at the pit , er that ceased because , cos miners always had coal as part of their er it was part of their wages you see . |
13 | Do n't Climb Out Of The Window now has pride of place alongside the great authors at Blackwells bookshop in Oxford . |
14 | Natural parents often had access to children guaranteed under a court order and foster parents had to be committed to support for ‘ parental responsibility ’ , which could cause difficulties , said Miss Marion Lowe , the association 's director . |
15 | On the contrary , it draws attention to the dangers of introducing western technology outside , and even in the west it 's a good illustration this of the extent to which or work in countries overseas has relevance for Britain , because we have done a great deal of work on the implications for the unemployment problem of having technology which requires too much capital , which has a very ratio of capital to labour . |
16 | It took some time to locate the bottle — normally as healthy as a young animal , Rory rarely had need of medication . |
17 | UK chairman John Gardner now has responsibility for manufacturing , logistics , mainframe development and corporate services . |
18 | Essentially , therefore , the provisions only had application to income falling within the first limb . |
19 | Most senior executives now have access to desktop microcomputers and , of course , fax and telex are used regularly . |
20 | A Farmland and Rural Development Act was passed in 1988 and farmers now have access to grant aid to help in diversification projects . |
21 | Nursing staff on some of those areas that we would pick out — those would be the intensive care units , the children 's units , the delivery suites and special care baby units — the nursing staff actually have control of permits which they can issue to relatives who are going to be here for a great length of time , and if they so feel that these relatives should n't be charged , they give them a permit and they park in a staff area at no charge whatsoever . |
22 | Each of the ‘ sentences ’ in the network only has meaning in terms of its relations to other sentences , and each of these sentences only has meaning in relation to others , and so on . |
23 | The Melrose forwards had control through sterling work by the back row of Andrew Redpath , Doddie Weir and Brian Laidlaw . |
24 | Numbers only have meaning in comparison with other numbers . |
25 | Thus , although these pupils generally have difficulty with reading , this does not mean that written tests should be ruled out . |
26 | Now comes a suggestion that the city also had control over land use outside its environs , not in this case in the Maya area , but in wetlands near the modern port of Veracruz , west of the Yucatan Peninsula . |
27 | As I said earlier , more than three quarters of recently retiring pensioners now have income from savings , and more than 60 per cent . |
28 | A divorce was therefore sought and granted on grounds of incompatibility ; Grace initially had custody of John . |
29 | On the other hand , if it is a matter of content , does the idea of culture only have meaning for students in the humanities and the social sciences ? |
30 | This new unit also had responsibility for issues relating to race , gender , disability . |