Example sentences of "[adv] [noun pl] have [verb] [prep] [art] " in BNC.

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1 Dogs who are already champions have to compete in the champions class .
2 Elsewhere reports have referred to the ‘ pathogenesis of the disorder ’ ( London Borough of Brent , 1985 , p.87 ) or ‘ the psychopathology of the Carlile family ’ ( London Borough of Greenwich , 1987 , p.106 ) and have made frequent reference to the seminal article by the late Henry Kempe and his colleagues ( Kempe et al . ,
3 Interesting how quickly suppliers have jumped on the ‘ features , not price ’ bandwagon started by Dell and Co in the US .
4 And now conservationists have joined in the criticism .
5 Now police have apologised for the mistake and promised to review their procedure for returning property to bereaved relatives .
6 My collection of over 2,000 cards , many of National Trust gardens , provides a useful historical record of how gardens have changed over the years in terms of layout and planting .
7 We know very little about the world history of such ideas and their dialectical development , but we do know a good deal about how things have gone in the main literate civilizations over the past four thousand years .
8 GAVIN MCCRONE reflects on how things have changed over the last six months
9 It is also interesting to note how relations have worsened with a number of élite institutions which have been identified with paternalist and consensual values — universities , the Church of England , the senior civil service , the BBC and One Nation Conservatism .
10 SCOTVEC 's role in accrediting SVQs was announced by Ian Lang , Scottish Education Minister , in 1989 and since then developments have proceeded at a very rapid pace .
11 Since then issues have revolved around the allocation of Royal Navy and Royal Fleet Auxiliary orders among the Tyne yards , Harland and Wolf in Belfast and other privatized warship yards .
12 Citizens Band Radio calls it Matchstick City and you can see why : boarded-up houses , houses with wild shadows staining the walls where flames have leapt to the roof .
13 The Smith-Thomson critique offers no causal explanation of precisely why shifts have occurred in the balance of community and state provision .
14 Now that we have provisionally fixed what a signal is , and how one may be recognized , let us consider some examples of signals — the songs of birds , the pheromones of moths and ants , and the dance of honeybees — before we consider the theoretical question of why signals have evolved in the form that we see in nature .
15 A parallel debate is evolving in Maine where officials have asked for the removal of a dam , built in 1936 , in order to preserve salmon runs .
16 This is on a dangerous bend where pedestrians have to walk on the carriageway .
17 Possibly this was not the intention of Parliament for " restored " seems inappropriate to describe the situation where goods have come into the police 's possession .
18 Going from there to , and that 's a sort of history of where things have happened over the previous four mon four months , to expectations about output this is the first survey since the recession began in which all regions , mainland regions of the U K say that they expect output to increase over the coming four months .
19 The picture drawn is a static one , and it has been unable to provide a convincing account of how and why changes have occurred in the pattern of industrial relations .
20 ‘ There have been a number of occasions in the past when stories have appeared in the press saying what the figures are going to be in one or two days ’ time … but when someone quotes exactly the figure which is going to come out the next day it is hard to believe they just made an inspired guess .
21 Both are only playing with the conventions of the mainstream domestic sitcom of the past 30 years , when writers have looked to the theatre ( notably the work of Neil Simon and Alan Ayckbourn ) as a model .
22 Not surprisingly , these reports have tended to appear at times when fatalities have occurred as a result of fires when occupants have been asleep .
23 Parents give to their children , and continue to give more than their children ever give them in most cases , although one situation in which this flow often is reversed is where children have migrated to a more affluent country , and expect to send money back to their parents ( see for example , Thorogood , 1987 ) .
24 Therefore monetarists have resorted to the claim that governments can exert control over the money stock if they are determined enough , and in so doing will bring about the desired effect on money incomes and prices .
25 Within the classroom too teachers have to live with an active or passive resistance to their best efforts .
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