Example sentences of "[noun sg] have take a [adj] [noun] " in BNC.

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1 The Division has taken a leading role in developing research into the assessment of work based learning ( AWBL ) .
2 Such a measure has taken a long time to appear .
3 Since 1989 defence has taken a growing share of state spending ; the official defence budget has doubled , keeping well ahead of inflation .
4 THE IDEA that Britain 's leading position in military technology automatically helps its industrial base has taken a new blow .
5 THE recession has taken a large bite out of profits at Daily Mail Trust , parent of the Daily Mail , Mail on Sunday and the Evening Standard .
6 THE recession has taken a heavy toll on UK investment levels , which are crucial to sustainable long-term growth .
7 THE UK recession has taken a giant bite out of McDonalds , the American burger chain .
8 The recession on the east coast has taken a heavy toll of banks there .
9 The scandal of the so-called Dianagate tape has taken a new twist .
10 The pyramid has taken a long time to crumble .
11 When the idea of a Royal Commission was in circulation , lawyers within the ranks of the Government , notably Sam Silkin , the Attorney General and one of the few front-benchers on either side to have taken a close interest in penal reform , and Alex Lyon , a Minister of State at the Home Office , pressed for the opportunity to be grasped to make an authoritative assessment of the arguments for a public prosecution service independent of the police .
12 His horse had taken a dozen blows and was weakening .
13 Thus it seemed , from our work and that of many other labs at about the same time , that brain RNA and protein synthesis were necessary for learning and memory formation , and that the field of biochemical memory research had taken a flying leap forward .
14 The overall tone of noble criticism remained moderate , yet political consciousness had taken a momentous leap since Nicholas 's death .
15 The months of dangerous living had taken a savage toll of his health and he had bad conjunctivitis .
16 No force had taken a worse drubbing in the first mad onrush of Plan XVII than the Second Army that had then been under his command ; yet , in the moment of defeat , he had made an astonishing turnabout .
17 The Education Committee has taken a similar decision in principle for teaching staff and is likely to finalise the matter later this summer .
18 As you will be aware the Council has taken a major initiative to investigate the levels of participation and standards of performance in sport and physical recreation among young people .
19 ‘ Hitherto , the Council has taken a positive view of franchising , regarding the overall benefits to both the profession and its clients as outweighing the disadvantages which will undoubtedly affect particular firms .
20 Though he did not reject the methodology and interests of the ‘ new philosophy ’ , nor attempt to go back beyond it to some earlier view , he thought that , in allowing too much to materialism , philosophy had taken a wrong turn .
21 His dragon had taken a mortal wound as he and Caledor clashed on the battlefield .
22 At the other end of the human time-scale , the idea that life could be , and was being , prolonged through man 's skill and foresight had taken a powerful hold .
23 The war has taken a serious turn against us .
24 ‘ The housing market remains depressed and confidence has taken a severe blow from the turmoil in the foreign exchange markets that led to sterling 's suspension from the ERM . ’
25 The moral terrain of the right has taken a strong line with football hooliganism , under-age drinking , heroin addiction , welfare scroungers , young criminals and the unemployed and homeless youth .
26 The fatal injury was a blow to the head , not a very heavy blow but the deceased had taken a substantial amount of alcohol in the hours before he suffered the injury , and the effect of alcohol is to increase the flow of blood to the brain so that , et cetera , et cetera , et cetera .
27 Meanwhile the politics of war had taken a new departure .
28 HOPES of freeing Cleveland housewife Maureen Paleschi from a Cairo jail have taken a severe blow .
29 More important , in the second case the Court has taken a major step by allowing notions of classical freedom of contract to play an important part in its interpretation of the Directive .
30 Occasionally overlap may have the opposite effect due to the ‘ falling between two stools ’ phenomenon , two operators at the same level or at different levels may each assume that the other has taken a particular action which they both know is required .
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