Example sentences of "[art] [noun] have [to-vb] a [noun] " in BNC.

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1 As the winner had to add a gold or silver medal to the trophy , it is obvious again that only the wealthy could compete and hope to win .
2 The courts have to draw a line somewhere when it comes to obviousness although it is difficult to lay down hard and fast rules .
3 Primarily the computer has to have a graphics capability , preferably monochrome and as high a resolution as possible .
4 When assigning records to areas , the DBA has to reconcile a trade-off .
5 In traversing an embedded semantic net hypertext , the user has to visit a text block .
6 Although the use of higher stack numbers is a great convenience to the manufacturer , it must be remembered that more phase windings require more drive circuits , so the user has to pay a penalty in terms of drive circuit cost .
7 Another member of ASUTRAMES explained how the repression increased , until there came a point when the Association had to call a halt to its public activities .
8 There perhaps you would say the id is beginning to dominate the ego , but in accepting these extreme cases of , of psychotics who are severely divorced from reality , the , what always happens is the id has to make a demand on the ego which then gratifies it .
9 Some work , such as putting in an inside toilet or repairing dangerous electric wiring , qualifies for a mandatory grant , which means that the council has to give a grant if you qualify on income grounds .
10 He said the Conservatives had to win a reputation for being ‘ a listening party ’ , showing a willingness , where necessary , ‘ to reappraise ’ .
11 The plants had to establish a nutrient cycle that would allow the nitrogen content of the sand to increase .
12 But the town had to have a gaol to justify its claim .
13 of the population having to receive a rebate or discount on the amount that they paid .
14 One good result so far , though , is that so many people were mystified by acronyms being bandied about ( SNUPPS , NII , AGR and the like ) that the secretariat for the inquiry had to produce a list of them .
15 3 Every member of the group has to keep a diary in which they describe their experiences and how they feel about them .
16 The borrower had to pay a shilling for a promissory note stamp and a fee of two shillings for enquiring into the sufficiency of his security .
17 The archer had to have a face .
18 In the latter case the policewoman has to write a report on the child for the superintendent to determine whether or not prosecution should follow .
19 By contrast , where time is not of the essence for the service of a landlord 's notice calling for a rent review , mere delay by the landlord , however lengthy and even if coupled with hardship to the tenant , does not of itself destroy the contractual right which the landlord has to serve a notice .
20 After this the law became increasingly convoluted as the courts tried to escape the rigours of a rule which meant that the court had to make a finding in favour of one party or the other .
21 In cases in which pain and suffering is not expected to continue for life the court has to form a view as to how long it is likely to continue .
22 On conviction , the court has to set a value on the drug assets earned during the previous six years , and a confiscation order .
23 The mines in the Dailly coalfield were notorious for gas and there was a joke in the county 's other mining areas that there was so much gas underground at Dailly that the farmers had to use a Davy safety lamp when ploughing the fields .
24 At each point shown by a diamond on the diagram , the farmers have to make a decision on what to do with their money .
25 So far as balance is concerned , would a teacher in a school with Afro-Caribbean children on the register have to present a case for as well as against apartheid when covering South Africa ?
26 does n't it come back to the issue of wh who they trustees are and who 's interest , given that trustees are expected to be independent , in the end , who 's interests do the trustees represent , because I 've had experience of working with a pension fund that was in massive surplus and the actualar actuaries refused to agree their final report until that surplus was dealt with , so that the trade unions and the employer through the trustees had to negotiate a way of spending that surplus and er given the pressures of the actuaries to say we were not allowed th the funds to continue unless you deal with this surplus , then it comes back to the issue of how the Board of Trustees is made up and if we accept that there is a degree of representation on that Board , then just exactly how that representation is divided .
27 With the simple voting framework , the voter has to form a judgement about the trade-offs between different objectives , for example , the level of taxes needed to finance a proposed spending programme .
28 The plaintiffs argued that the auditors had to use a basis of valuation which was capable of producing a figure which represented the fair selling value of the shares , and that if that basis were challenged , the court could decide whether the basis was such a basis .
29 Councillors heard the authority had to set a budget of £11,614,000 for the new financial year and the calculations were based on a community charge to be levied on 74,014 residents .
30 Success rates for tasks where the pupil has to make a measurement , or work from a given measurement , were found to depend upon two specific difficulty factors whether the number concerned is an awkward decimal and whether or not the measuring instrument in use has to be applied repeatedly .
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