Example sentences of "it has [adv] " in BNC.
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1 | It would have even more credibility if the Labour party would claim and set out the funding that it would provide for the national health service , which it has expressly failed to do . |
2 | It has partly been caused by changes in the family itself . |
3 | It is obvious that the government does n't know how to respond to the messes it has partly created and partly suffers from . |
4 | The relation between contemporary modes of communication and the contemporary novel may not always be obvious or straightforward , but it has profoundly changed the ways in which people think about fiction and the value they attach to reading . |
5 | The fund , raised in 1944 in the Midlands , was invested by officials of the Royal Warwickshire Regiment and , apart from the stock market crash of two years ago , it has steadily increased . |
6 | The first sortie on to the Promenade was made on June 6 , and two days later was taken round the whole system to test for clearances. 641 was passed by the Railway Inspector as ready for service on 3 July , since which time it has regularly operated the Fleetwood service . |
7 | It has regularly proved to be one of the most popular options . |
8 | It has regularly attracted research studentships of various kinds , and provides a stimulating research environment . |
9 | In summary then , the action project appears not to have made a great deal of difference to people 's receipt of other services , except that it has probably kept some sufferers away from day care and has increased home help hours for its own clients ( and probably allayed the need for home help among other clients ) . |
10 | The churchyard around it has probably been a burial place for 1000 years . |
11 | If the l.e.d. does not light , it has probably been inserted the wrong way round in the circuit — reverse its leads and try again . |
12 | It has probably been caused by his friendship with a younger man . ’ |
13 | It has probably never entered his entered that his Test career could be over . |
14 | That does n't mean that the game is rubbish , just that it has probably been done elsewhere before . |
15 | Dunning and colleagues conclude that authors like Clarke are guilty of romanticising working-class history , ‘ attributing to it a degree of family , inter-age-group and neighbourhood solidarity it has probably never possessed ’ ( ibid.:237 ) . |
16 | In the case of Jupiter it has probably had only a small effect on the rate of loss of heat . |
17 | While this has greatly reduced the archival storage problem it has probably made the access problem worse . |
18 | The truth is that despite the siting of the creamery it has probably not been made with local products for some time . |
19 | But it has probably changed more in the last 40 years than at any other time . |
20 | In the 143 years since it was played it has probably never been surpassed . |
21 | Seven months later , on October 6th 1905 , the Standard updated the situation revealing en passant that the Cricket Club had recently acquired the field it has today , and in which the Golf Club happily has access for car parking . |
22 | A ‘ sewer ’ was a straight cut , the kind of geometrical channel beloved by modern engineers , and did not have the connotation of foul water which it has today . |
23 | To avoid that fate , Microsoft will have to do more than keep ahead in the business , and of the rivals , that it has today . |
24 | They set about reinforcing and extending their property to give it much the appearance it has today , apart from some modern restoration . |
25 | The local government system of the time had been given some shape by the Municipal Corporations Act of 1835 , but it was not until the end of the century that it acquired a structure that would enable it to take on the range of functions it has today . |
26 | Well I think they 're helping us erm possibly if this system had been started a few years ago , then possibly flats complex , would n't have got the bad reputation it has today . |
27 | This would not have had the same meaning as it has today for the term park originally meant land enclosed to keep beasts for hunting or ornamental purposes . |
28 | This gradually changed the atmosphere to the composition that it has today and allowed the development of higher forms of life such as fish , reptiles , mammals , and ultimately the human race . |
29 | However , it has surely been to the mutual advantage of the people of Scotland and England that we have had that union for the past two and a half centuries . |
30 | Although the US economy is not in recession , it has visibly slowed . |