Example sentences of "[noun pl] [adv] have [noun sg] [prep] [noun sg] " in BNC.

  Next page
No Sentence
1 Like phonemes themselves , words only have significance in relation to other words and as part of a total system of classification .
2 Regan ( 1977 ) complains about the lack of statistics on their background but says there are still some subject areas where inspectors only have experience of grammar and independent schools .
3 Soviet commanders already have Foxhound in service , and another two types of fighter with similar abilities will soon follow .
4 I mean er and as I say you had everything erm when er I wanted coal I mean you had coal erm because after my husband ceased at the pit , er that ceased because , cos miners always had coal as part of their er it was part of their wages you see .
5 Essentially , therefore , the provisions only had application to income falling within the first limb .
6 Most senior executives now have access to desktop microcomputers and , of course , fax and telex are used regularly .
7 A Farmland and Rural Development Act was passed in 1988 and farmers now have access to grant aid to help in diversification projects .
8 Each of the ‘ sentences ’ in the network only has meaning in terms of its relations to other sentences , and each of these sentences only has meaning in relation to others , and so on .
9 Numbers only have meaning in comparison with other numbers .
10 Thus , although these pupils generally have difficulty with reading , this does not mean that written tests should be ruled out .
11 In contrast to the morning papers , which suffered most heavily from the competition of the nationals , the evenings also had scope for growth in towns where an evening was not already established .
  Next page