Example sentences of "[det] [noun sg] [verb] have a [noun] " in BNC.

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1 Since the nineteen fifties each base has had a side .
2 This argument does have a loophole .
3 Several teenage mothers in this book had had a home tutor and most had enjoyed it .
4 This bottle seems to have a plastic stopper , ’ he murmured as he filled two glasses .
5 Since the introduction of the Control of Pollution Act 1974 , this country has had a system of strategic planning and site licensing for waste management .
6 And if the diverse references of the materials used in such music do have a coherence , it mainly rests on a kind of formalist and/or surrealist playing with sound-combinations and their mental associations and images , characteristic — in its implied position of social isolation — of almost all avant-garde music in the twentieth century .
7 When the first person returns , the second takes over and the game continues until each person has had a turn .
8 Two disadvantages of such techniques are that each word has to have a tag field added to it ( and this may need to be quite long to hold a suitable range of values ) , and execution of each instruction becomes more complicated ( and therefore possibly slower ) .
9 Anyone seeking temporary work beyond his own parish had to have a certificate ( signed by the minister and an overseer ) which acknowledged legal responsibility .
10 This was that although the District would be explicitly recognised as the Responsible Body for Chapter III courses throughout the rural areas scheme , if any class wished to have a Chapter III category course organised by the Cambridge Board the WEA would agree to the Board assuming providing powers for the purpose of meeting the wishes of the students in the class .
11 Before experiencing a Methodist conversion , Bamford senior had been a noted drinker and wrestler , but even at that time had had a taste for books .
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