Example sentences of "[noun sg] have [verb] [noun sg] [prep] [noun sg] " in BNC.
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1 | Recorded rates of notified crime have increased year on year by 5.5% on average , and by a massive 16% in 1990–91 . |
2 | Better roads and more efficient and cheaper forms of transport have facilitated contact between town and country . |
3 | But she and the charity have stood side by side and today she was welcomed like an old friend in Milton Keynes . |
4 | SIX OF the seven top economic advisers to the Government have given warning against tax increases in the Budget next month , saying that the economy is just too fragile to sustain them . |
5 | All members of this sub-committee have undergone training in selection and interviewing skills . |
6 | Ideals and a vision of education 's unrealized potential have to go hand in hand with pragmatism . |
7 | ‘ We have never believed strongly in doing consumer advertising for the sake of it — PR and advertising have to go hand in hand . |
8 | You know as well as I do that art and commerce have walked hand in hand since at least the Renaissance . ’ |
9 | In South Africa the oil embargo coupled to the availability of large reserves of low quality but very cheap coal have made production of oil from coal attractive . |
10 | From the time of Stalin , at least , modesty and megalomania have gone hand in hand . |
11 | That will tend to be offshore as banks and building societies in this country have to deduct tax at source . |
12 | As far as the social element of citizenship is concerned , cuts in public expenditure have meant underfunding of education and public housing and complaints about the standard and availability of many public services , including public transport and the health service . |
13 | Our successful policies of deregulation and privatisation have gone hand in hand with a sustained and growing programme of investment . |