Example sentences of "have [noun pl] [prep] " in BNC.
Next pageNo | Sentence |
---|---|
1 | The main bedroom has balconies over the west-facing stone loggia and the bay window of the drawing-room . |
2 | Standard & Poor 's has misgivings about this particular plank of the strategy : the company is moving into markets with entrenched competition and aggressive pricing , it says — perhaps a salutary warning all of those companies attracted by the bright light of Asynchronous Transfer Mode switching . |
3 | E. subalpina has suffusions of pink and grey in its glaucous foliage . |
4 | ‘ Lilliput has enemies at home and abroad , ’ he explained . |
5 | He has clinics in Dublin , London and Armagh . |
6 | Mr James was brought in by Eagle 's creditor banks — the group has debts of over £80m — and has been given until the end of next year to turn the business around . |
7 | Maxwell , 33 , who has debts of £406.5 million , arrived promptly for a 20-minute interview with a job counsellor at Didcot , Oxon . |
8 | Is the Prime Minister aware that Gloucestershire has debts of 125 million pounds . |
9 | The service has been a life line to Jeff Lockyer , he now has debts of a few hundred pounds , which compared to a couple of years ago , is an enormous weight off his mind . |
10 | He has since been sacked by Nalgo and has debts of £10,000 . |
11 | The association , which operated from Darlington Arts Centre in Vane Terrace , has debts of almost £30,000 . |
12 | Their rapacious habits have been the subject of bloody hyperbole in films and bestsellers , so everybody knows that the shark has ranks of fearsome , pointed teeth , an elegant , incessant swishing swimming motion , a tail with a long ‘ point ’ uppermost , and a big appetite . |
13 | The hotel also has bikes for hire and a 25% reduction is offered to Enterprise guests . |
14 | Sir John , the seventh baronet of Redenham in Hampshire , who also has estates on the Isle of Wight and on a Scottish island , refused to discuss the matter yesterday . |
15 | I 'm glad to report that Captain Alwyne Farquharson of Invercauld who has estates on Royal Deeside and on the island of Mull , has finally abandoned his opposition to a film crew building a temporary track on the island . |
16 | ‘ He has estates in … |
17 | To the degree that a managerial ideology and practice has tendencies towards bureaucracy and control at the school level , then it will itself create pressure upon teachers towards the restricted view of professionality . |
18 | We try to give a picture of Israel as a democracy , a country that has strengths and weaknesses , that has reasons for being distrustful . ’ |
19 | Human beings are purposive ; a person 's performance has reasons behind it . |
20 | The company has products in clinical trials with two American and European pharmaceutical companies . |
21 | However the use and acceptance of touch depends on numerous cultural norms and personal characteristics ; each culture has rules about how , when and where to touch another human , and this is related to gender , age and maturity . |
22 | ( You may find that your course , college or university has rules for upper and lower limits , so check these before you start . ) |
23 | This principle includes the need to see whether the professional or other body under scrutiny not only has rules of conduct , which will be thoroughly scrutinised within the statutory machinery , but also has an effective mechanism for enforcing the rules of conduct and is likely to enforce them . |
24 | Indeed , a system which has rules of adjudication is necessarily also committed to a rule of recognition of an elementary and imperfect sort . |
25 | Christian Aid has projects in every country in the world . |
26 | ‘ He 's more and more violent now , and sometimes has fights with the people from the village . |
27 | He already has wins over Edberg and Lendl , and it was he who ended the title ambitions of Wimbledon Champion Michael Stich . |
28 | ( The Teaching Award in Queensland has scales of salaries based on qualifications and experience . |
29 | 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 . |
30 | 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 . |