Example sentences of "[noun prp] have [pron] [to-vb] [prep] the " in BNC.

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1 Gregory has nothing to say about the Thuringians in Clovis 's reign .
2 The KGB Collegium issued a statement on Aug. 22 : " The staff of the KGB have nothing to do with the unlawful acts of the group of adventurists . "
3 I do not want to suggest that Stalin had nothing to do with the origins of the cold war .
4 Former Quins centre Ron Eriksson had plenty to celebrate with the only try in London Scottish 's 8-3 win over a rebuilt Gloucester side .
5 I can not resist the feeling that the Government 's extraordinary surrender yesterday to German bullying over the recognition of Croatia had something to do with the need to appease German public opinion , which is turning nasty on the whole process — or perhaps it was just sucking up to the right hon. Member for Finchley ( Mrs.
6 It stressed that it accepted that Black had nothing to do with the stolen goods or weapons found at the cottage .
7 Does not the Minister understand that the simple reason for inward investment in Britain has nothing to do with the Government 's activities ?
8 Since you left Europe , the car market had deteriorated ; does Europe have anything to learn from the way the US car industry is coping with the recession ?
9 By early January 1945 , observers in the Stuttgart area were pointing out that Mein Kampf was being — rather belatedly — cited to prove that Germany had itself to blame for the war , that Hitler 's expansionist aims which he had laid down twenty years earlier were the cause of the war , and that it was therefore clear that ‘ the Führer has worked for war from the very beginning ’ .
10 ‘ Would this request from London have anything to do with the package and report I sent them , which never arrived because it was intercepted right here in this office ? ’
11 And they will undoubtedly object to the more unbridled formulations that enter the three fictions ; the biography of Eliot has plenty to say on the subject , too , while maintaining a comparative , and suitable , reserve .
12 The specialist architectural press ignores this amorphous school of design , while even the Prince of Wales has nothing to say on the subject , reserving his spleen for imaginative buildings that he and so many of his future subjects profess to hate .
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