Example sentences of "[that] [pers pn] has [det] [adj] [noun] " in BNC.

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1 The product itself , for example , though useful may be so commonplace or so inexpensive that it has little intrinsic interest outside its own application .
2 This proved to be a fateful oversight since one of the most devastating criticisms to be levelled at Keynesian macroeconomics in recent years has been that it has such shaky foundations in microeconomics .
3 It is only when we remember that it has many internal parts , all obeying laws of physics at their own level , that we understand the behaviour of the whole body .
4 However , the view of style adopted here implies that it has many mundane aspects , and that style is not simply a property of poetic or even just literary texts .
5 The Calderdale TEC says that it has many young people waiting .
6 It means that it has fewer aural clues from which to decipher the sense .
7 One of the reasons it thinks that COSE is interested in its participation is that it has some key technology that in typical DEC fashion , it has failed to trumpet .
8 The tribunal is not restricted to evidence acceptable in a court of law ; provided that it has some probative value the court will not reassess its weight .
9 But it has never really shown that it has any new ideas about where it should end up .
10 The trouble is that he is not a natural core forward , which is partly why he has been shifted from lock , but neither has he as yet convinced too many that he has that instinctive reaction in terms of man and/or ball which enables the born flanker to do his stuff .
11 ‘ I have seen him play a little bit more to the net than normally , but I would say that he has much more confidence staying back and playing long rallies .
12 ‘ I am not saying that Charles is incapable of love , it 's just that he has this unreal perception of women .
13 I reach that conclusion , I hope , having properly considered the pros and cons of the situation ; the fact that he has this particular advantage as a police officer in marshalling evidence ; considering the issues .
14 I reach that conclusion , I hope , having properly considered the pros and cons of the situation : the fact that he has this particular advantage as a police officer in marshalling evidence ; considering the issues .
15 The inspection , when it comes about , could be a first test of Mr Hussein 's new smiling face : he is already suspected of cheating , particularly when he denies that he has any biological weapons .
16 This is a shame , for although he 's admittedly playing to a club audience , you do n't have to suppress the songs to maintain the groove — and the doctor has proved with ‘ Killer ’ and tonight 's storming version of ‘ Flashback Jack ’ , that he has some potent stimulants in his black bag .
17 This is a shame , for although he 's admittedly playing to a club audience , you do n't have to suppress the songs to maintain the groove — and the doctor has proved with ‘ Killer ’ and tonight 's storming version of ‘ Flashback Jack ’ , that he has some potent stimulants in his black bag .
18 Of course , he is n't so naive as to suggest that he has some privileged hot-line to the 16th and 17th centuries .
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