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

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1 As well as having undertaken the nominated activity within 1990 and being members of the BAPC , entrants for the award had to assemble a small report giving the ‘ whys ’ and the ‘ hows ’ of their particular project .
2 The flash has to have a manual override to be useful , as it will serve only to tell the operator when a photograph has been taken .
3 The scientist has to remember a great deal of information before he can even begin to look for patterns in the data .
4 Bohr therefore supposed that the electron had to occupy a circular orbit whose angular momentum took one of the discrete values
5 ‘ If the law has to have a proper effect then landlords and breweries should know that to serve young people like this , they are in danger of losing their licences . ’
6 So the law has to play a little con-trick .
7 Sleight apologised for this state of affairs at the Congress in Dublin in 1895 : " It must be remembered that it is exceedingly difficult for the executive committee to meet together often , for every time they do so they have to bear their own travelling expenses , and sometimes hotel expenses ; and to whatever centre they are summoned , it only means that some members of the committee have to travel a considerable distance .
8 The judge had to consider a preliminary point concerning the application of the Limitation Act 1980 to the local authority 's claim .
9 But throughout all this teaching , this familiarising and making intelligible , the teacher has to preserve a certain distance .
10 To get to their proposed operational area the convoy had to take a difficult route .
11 Thus , the Chancellor of the Exchequer has to make a special effort in every budget to ensure that tax rates ( or thresholds ) are adjusted in line with inflation — unless , of course , he particularly wishes to increase the tax burden of these groups as part of his economic strategy .
12 Both are embedded in the roof of a nearby school and so the Captain has to make a manual approach , without the benefit of wearing the EOD protective suit .
13 The funding money had to be matched pound for pound by other backers ; the people who believed in the paper had to put up £5,000 of their own money between them ; and the paper had to have a controlling group to protect it from an outside takeover which might change the political line .
14 The Labour Party 's executive committee stressed after a Feb. 22 meeting that the government had to make a clear decision on the formula within two to three weeks , otherwise it would be forced to end the coalition .
15 The descent took only a few minutes , but then the man had to make a laborious return journey with the empty sledge , which might take half an hour .
16 The House of Lords stated that the employer had to devise a safe system and operate it .
17 During the journey away from his old un-reformed self , the mystic has to enter a dark night of the senses .
18 This means that the ‘ brain' of the synth has to have a certain amount of waveform information from the guitar before it can determine an actual pitch and synthesise that information accordingly .
19 ‘ The guy from the hotel had to make a mad dash over here , that 's for sure . ’
20 Perhaps if it 's a bad case the patient has to wear a special boot or keep the leg held straight with iron braces . ’
21 The decoder has to create a cognitive space in which the deictic elements and terms can be realised indexically .
22 The general format and size of advertisements has been specified by National Marketing and must be adhered to ; it includes the KPMG logo at both top and bottom of the details and therefore the advertisement has to have a minimum size of 2 columns wide and 8 cm deep .
23 With its cameras , extending arms and weapons , it is a versatile machine , capable of disrupting a bomb without the Operator having to make a manual approach .
24 This argument is reversed when the load has to move a large distance , because a high operating speed is then required .
25 Though not used by homoeopathic pharmacies in this country for potencies below the 1M , it is used commercially in Belgium for all potencies , and is also used when a practitioner has to make a specific potency for a particular patient , such as a potency of chloroform for a case of chloroform allergy .
26 Even inset boards , where a child has to match a certain shape , e.g. a lorry to its silhouette , are difficult for the beginner who does n't always realise that he is trying to put it in upside-down .
27 When Minton painted alongside students in the life class ( ‘ That was a marvellous adrenalin shot , ’ recalled Greaves ) he taught by example that a picture has to have a lively activity right up to the four edges of the canvas , and that if the background is treated merely as a secondary constituent to the model , areas of the canvas will become inert .
28 He explained that every biscuit has to have a different flavour and must be new or improved , as Americans have a short attention span : ‘ The food here is a bit like the film industry ; you always have to come up with something else . ’
29 In approaching this case the court first stated that there were many cases where a court has to construe a standard clause in , for example , a charter party , and there may be some earlier decisions on the same clause or on a clause which is in terms which are indistinguishable .
30 Q. Do you approve of a woman having to have a vaginal examination as apart of the routine medical examination to enter Britain ?
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