Example sentences of "[noun sg] has [verb] with [adj] [noun sg] " in BNC.

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1 ‘ This idea of a job change has come with perfect timing , has n't it ?
2 In winter , skin has to contend with central heating and cold temperatures ; conditions which can cause even the oiliest of skin types to become dehydrated .
3 Fiji 's government is in the process of defining those standards , and a recent call from the Attorney-General for better guidelines from the country 's Film Control Board has met with widespread support from all sectors of the population .
4 Fiji 's government is in the process of defining those standards , and a recent call from the Attorney-General for better guidelines from the country 's Film Control Board has met with widespread support from all sectors of the population .
5 Trent regional task force has worked with exemplary commitment to achieve both the agreed deadline next year and the interim deadline of 1 April this year .
6 Of the Guerrero-Girke combination , Kren remarks , ‘ You could say that Wright 's work has to do with strong control with a certain allowance for sentiment .
7 I was saying that the second major point of contention has to do with public consultation on the results of the Hydrotechnica report .
8 The Zero Tolerance Campaign has met with considerable success and its effectiveness can be judged by its winning of this special .
9 The proposal for the lab has met with considerable opposition .
10 Relatively successful at Glasgow Rangers , the move has met with stiff opposition at Arsenal and vociferous action at West Ham , a flurry of red cards waved at every opportunity .
11 The crew have families and need work , and as they become virtual employees of the band , the band has to act with appropriate responsibility .
12 No no but Celia , Ruby Ruby told me her husband has to do with bankrupt office stock
13 Direct regulation of pollution has met with mixed success over the last 25 years .
14 Hydro-Quebec 's James Bay development has met with strong opposition from Cree and Inuit peoples living in the region , who are supported by a growing tide of opposition from Canadian and US environmental groups .
15 Tourism has developed with considerable speed into one of the major industries of the modern world , and much of its current shape and nature is the result of British innovation during the past 150 years .
16 Although this strategy has met with limited success in terms of reducing the overall level ( Dunleavy , 1990 ) , it has had severe implications for the management of public sector organisations .
17 The essential difference i between I twelve and I five is that I twelve in the past has dealt with central area office developments
18 The government has announced with great fanfare the formation of Islamic courts for Muslim marital and social disputes .
19 Above all , from a Unionist point of view , the republic 's government has behaved with crass insensitivity in clinging to a constitution that still calls explicitly for a unitary state .
20 As that percentage has dwindled , the Met has scrambled with great success after private money but even so has not been able to raise enough to take up the slack .
21 No , there has not been another report saying how well she did in the South Atlantic , the European parliament has not ‘ liberated ’ Britain 's £500 million rebate from the European Community , nor has the opposition to the new nuclear power station at Sizewell withdrawn from the public inquiry The news that the Prime Minister has awaited with bated breath ever since she visited CERN last year comes from Switzerland , and it has nothing to do with Zurich , or gnomes .
22 The NGC scheme has met with strong opposition from local people worried about the possible health effects of electro-magnetic fields and the destruction of the countryside .
23 No single measure of public expenditure has met with universal agreement , and even when one has been widely used for some time , it can be subject to change for a variety of reasons .
24 The TFAP has met with severe criticism for failing to halt rainforest loss , now running at 18 million hectares each year .
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