Example sentences of "have [noun] [prep] " in BNC.

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31 The object of the analysis is then to identify and explain in what circumstances the authoritarian direction of resources has advantage over market-type alternatives .
32 The teacher who finds , for instance , that a child has difficulty in including himself in a ‘ family count up ’ , may make sure that he has opportunity for counting the members of many different groups of which he is a part , on other occasions .
33 Christian Aid has projects in every country in the world .
34 ‘ He 's more and more violent now , and sometimes has fights with the people from the village .
35 ICL NOW HAS OFFICEPOWER IN HUNGARIAN
36 He already has wins over Edberg and Lendl , and it was he who ended the title ambitions of Wimbledon Champion Michael Stich .
37 Unless she has money of her own — which is an eventuality we can ignore for practical purposes — she is in extreme difficulty .
38 For instance , if he has money of the client in his hands not entrusted to him for any specific purpose , there is nothing in the section to prevent his retaining the amount due to him out of that money .
39 And building society , anybody who has a building society account prior to ninety one two if they had n't income really i they were silly to have money in the building society account because they were having tax deducted but could n't get it back and at the same time as the independent taxation they changed the er tax system for building societies and banks which meant that banks and building societies were then deducted tax at the standard rate of twenty five percent and it could be refunded or repaid or not deducted in certain circumstances , so back to your question , anybody who has money in a building society now , or is n't taxable , should ask the building society not to deduct tax , as they 're entitled to do , fill a form and , and where people can state that they do n't , they 're not liable to pay tax , building societies and banks will not now deduct income tax .
40 Mr McWhirter does what he likes at Burleigh , and the reason is that Mr McWhirter has money in the place . ’
41 In last Friday 's HAS Election Post a letter from M D Tubman referred to the 100-year-old British electoral system .
42 W.M. Wood ( HAS Election Post March 30 ) seems to show concern for the nation 's moral welfare if we have an agnostic elected to prime minister .
43 Mr Lewis has ben with the company 18 years , the last six as design manager .
44 ( The Teaching Award in Queensland has scales of salaries based on qualifications and experience .
45 She has clear /l/ twice — a Jamaican would be expected to have it everywhere — yet twice she has vocalisation of /l/ as in LE .
46 Equally , the Treasury has preferences for the way in which policy is carried out , resisting interest rate changes for example when the Bank might otherwise think these desirable .
47 The ‘ pruning saw ’ normally sold for such work has teeth on two edges and , used in tight positions where it is invariably needed , great care and patience is essential to avoid the back edge causing damage to stems and growth that should not be harmed .
48 Goodness is such a property , perhaps ; and this is why the principle of universalizability has teeth in ethics .
49 Their relationship has tenderness in it , and treachery .
50 For example , the natural arrangement of the chemical elements in Mendeleyev 's periodic table has groups of traits reappearing cyclically .
51 The person who has difficulty with simple accounting can not always afford to have someone keep his cheque-book up to date .
52 It is most important that the pupil , especially if he has difficulty with spelling , should see you as a sympathetic helper who wants him to learn , and not as an examiner who only tells him he 's wrong .
53 One reason why the modern reader has difficulty with a positive evaluation of the term ‘ national prejudices ’ is that , in the twentieth century , prejudice has taken on a substantive meaning .
54 He 's not fully aware of what 's wrong with him but he knows that he 's wobbly and has difficulty with certain things .
55 He feels something ; is inspired by it ; his mind takes off ; his periods flow — and afterwards he has difficulty in recalling their point of origination , even their exact meaning ( like Browning , see below ) .
56 Though he has difficulty in writing anything for publication , he is a scrupulous and painstaking examiner , and his own examination papers are carefully pondered , finely drafted works of art .
57 But just as the narrator has difficulty in piecing together the fragments of her story , so we as readers are never able to see the whole picture .
58 In cold and damp weather the carb sometimes has difficulty in getting heat energy to vaporise fuel , so its temperature drops and it freezes the water droplets in the incoming air .
59 Looking at Philip Swallow now , as he seats himself in a low , upholstered chair facing her , Robyn has difficulty in recognizing the jet-set philanderer of Rupert Sutcliffe 's description .
60 For example , if the person is severely incapacitated and has difficulty in mobilising , it can be important to know whether , when at home , it is necessary to go upstairs to the toilet .
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