Example sentences of "[art] [noun] [vb mod] have a [noun] " in BNC.
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1 | However , it recommends that the auditor should have a duty to report direct to the regulator and should be required to examine and comment on the effectiveness of the internal controls the trustees have established . |
2 | Any further development of the field will have a bearing on the field life of Thistle . |
3 | Should the goods prove unfit for their purpose , the buyer will have a claim only if their unfitness relates to the sphere of reliance placed upon the seller . |
4 | The basket of shares in the index is seldom identical to the market portfolio and so the basket of shares corresponding to the index may have a beta value ( with respect to the market portfolio ) that differs from unity . |
5 | The story may have a basis in fact ; it is possible there was a prehistoric dwelling here that is now swallowed up in the mud at the bottom of the lake . |
6 | It is true that whichever is the loser will have a remedy against the unauthorised seller . |
7 | The driver would have a microprocessor controlled throttle to give greatest efficiency . |
8 | And when she did the cottage would have a shine on it . |
9 | The course may have a water jump . |
10 | The stranger might have a warrant for their arrest . |
11 | The units could have a counter top and there would need to be efficient lighting . |
12 | 4.1 The way in which clients are received throughout the Department will have a bearing on how they subsequently act . |
13 | The programme would have a budget of $200 million for environmental sensors on military submarines , ships and aircraft . |
14 | The professor will have a room and access to secretarial services in the Institute of Archaeology . |
15 | The Leader of the Opposition must have a chance to answer . |
16 | Results have not gone in his favour in the short-term , but I believe the club will have a job holding on to him in the future . |
17 | But alike in the British and the American traditions the expectation that the poet would have a message was so ingrained that even by those readers most alert to and informed about Eliot 's French connections The Waste Land was still thought to deliver an urgent signal — usually about the bankruptcy of the European , or the Western , cultural and civic traditions . |
18 | But they also said the Jews would have a homeland in Palestine and agreed that when the war ended the French would control Syria and what was then called Mount Lebanon . |
19 | The crematoria will have a duty list of ministers . |
20 | It also predicted that the electron should have a partner : an antielectron , or positron . |
21 | This case supports the theory that functional disturbances of the thymus may have a role in the pathogenesis of inflammatory bowel disease . |
22 | The legislature would have a veto over appointments to key Cabinet posts , including that of Prime Minister , but would be subordinate to the President and would have little influence over economic policy . |
23 | The District Council considers that the sites may have a role to play in the long-term strategic land reserve , although at this stage as no calculations have been carried out as to the requirements it is difficult to assess what role they might play . |
24 | In any particular case or cases the Council shall have a power to waive in writing any of the provisions of these Rules for a particular purpose or purposes expressed in such waiver and to revoke such waiver . |
25 | The exchange should have a mechanism by which to enforce its members ' compliance with the rules . |
26 | The visitors will have a buffet reception on Saturday night in the parish hall . |
27 | The entry-level will have a 15-inch screen , new to Sun , capable of 1024 x 768 or standard Sun resolution . |
28 | If they are really fast , the bowler may have a chance to hit the wicket before the batter returns . |
29 | For the average property , the cistern should have a capacity of 230 litres ( 50 gallons ) . |
30 | A black hole with a mass a few times that of the sun would have a temperature of only one ten millionth of a degree above absolute zero . |