Example sentences of "[noun sg] have [art] lot " in BNC.

  Next page
No Sentence
1 Though it is dead the minute it leaves the scalp , your hair has a lot to put up with .
2 If the pupil needs to be withdrawn for specialist teaching for a substantial amount of schoolwork , unit provision has a lot to offer .
3 A specially-designed timetable means the driver has a lot of freedom to stop , start and reverse in response to events on the track .
4 The driver has a lot of freedom to stop , start and reverse in response to events on the track .
5 I have to say that while I am quite sure that ‘ Summer 's Eve ’ is a perfectly suitable wash for people with sensitive skins and that a no-talcum powder has a lot going for it , I ca n't possible support the selling of this product as necessary for ‘ intimate ’ care .
6 Our temperament has a lot to do with the way we naturally handle conflicts .
7 ‘ Your sister has a lot to answer for ! ’
8 For instance , difference theorists dislike the implication that everything about women 's behaviour can be traced simply to their subordination , and this resistance has a lot to recommend it .
9 In fact , money has a lot to do with it .
10 Money has a lot to do with it .
11 Money has a lot to do with it , as it has with every problem in Derbyshire .
12 Well it , it , teaching has a lot of er er problems with that really because it 's , it 's , it 's playing a role .
13 ‘ The universities have a lot to offer industry , and industry has a lot to offer universities , and I do n't just mean money , ’ he said .
14 The campaign to win the student vote has a lot to learn
15 She said yesterday : ‘ Healthy eating has a lot to do with living a good and honest life .
16 His high profile as a comedian , poet , singer and musician has a lot to do with the regular weekly poem he writes for the Weekend Guardian , recent appearances on radio in ‘ Kaleidoscope ’ and ‘ Loose Ends ’ and the ‘ Time Out ’ Cabaret Award , but it is in his live stage act that he can best be appreciated as an hilarious dead-pan comic .
17 The across-the-board respect for green thinking had a lot to do with this change in atmosphere — so too did the disappearance of the ‘ Soviet threat ’ .
18 I hoped that Jack Mason had restricted his intake of real ale last night and that he was feeling as cheerful as I was , though my happy frame of mind had a lot to do with Sally Drayton .
19 Willink as a lawyer had a lot to do with the administration of the Church and saw the argument that an archbishop must be able to bear a load of administration .
20 The Old Testament had a lot to say about God administering fire .
21 Head Steve Sanderson said : ‘ We have had severe environmental problems and as a result have a lot of asthmatic children .
22 A problem arises with the finale , which Beethoven marks Allegro ma non troppo ( like Toscanini , Brüggen treats it as an Allegro molto ) but there is no doubting that the work has a lot of fire in its belly .
23 Do you feel that Schenker has a lot to offer ?
24 ‘ If a folder has a lot of stuff in it , it sounds bigger than one which is fairly small .
25 Comparative Neurobiology by Peter Mill has a lot about standard muscle and nerve physiology , nothing about development and too little about the status and functioning of the invertebrate nervous system .
26 Yet many bakers say that if the yeast is not left to develop , the resulting bread has a lot less flavour and structure .
27 The same theme recurred frequently ; because arts students had few timetabled hours , science students tended to assume that they did little work , although one first-year physical science student did note that most of her work was done in lectures and labs , while many girls on her corridor had a lot of background work to do outside timetabled sessions .
28 The decision based on a number of current offspring , larger numbers can be greater benefited with and therefore it 's more likely that if the parent had a lot of er offspring then he would continue with the investment and erm the conclusion from now is that males have a greater reproductive success , therefore they are more likely to desert because they can erm and erm this and erm the basic argument of this is one parent can get away with investing less share of erm resources they 're likely to spend more er then they 're to do it , so in other words erm if , if one of the , of the two is being to get away with having the other they can go out to er pursue their own and therefore erm each partner force the other to invest more .
29 INDUSTRIAL development staff at Sunderland 's civic centre and town ( or should that be city ) hall have a lot to live up to .
30 Internal UPSs have a lot going for them — modest price , easy installation , fix-and-forget security .
  Next page