Example sentences of "[noun sg] [noun pl] [verb] have a [noun] " in BNC.

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1 Safety rule regulations have to have a hat on your head .
2 In one of her letters the poet mentions having had a letter from an aunt whom she describes as ‘ sententious ’ [ ML , 2 , 311 ] .
3 Pipe smokers and whisky drinkers have done much better , with a fall in duties of around 20% , while wine drinkers have had a ball , with a 30% fall in tax .
4 Many portraits of infant boys appear to have a hairstyle resembling that of the emperor Trajan ( AD 98–117 ) .
5 Nevertheless the debtor countries continue to have a problem because the flow of private finance fell considerably between 1982 and 1984 after the emergence of the debt problem , and this fall in private flows of capital has not recovered .
6 B. The lowland farmers choose to have a mixture of crops and livestock .
7 It is shown in Chapter 8 that the declaration of dividend payments tends to have a depressive effect on share prices and that the larger the dividend payout relative to the share price the greater the impact on the price .
8 This suggestion seems in the right neighbourhood , for if checkerboard solutions do have a defect , it must lie in their distinctive feature , that they treat people differently when no principle can justify the distinction .
9 ‘ The main Parcelforce ads have had a halo effect on international services and have taken the pressure off corporate image building for us , ’ says Parcelforce International 's services manager Andy Young .
10 It was found that one in 15 among 200 people with odour problems investigated had a condition called trimethylaminuria — or fish odour syndrome .
11 ‘ The Time Lords seem to have a secret .
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