Example sentences of "have [noun] for [art] [adj] [noun] " in BNC.

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1 After moving to Ireland earlier this year , Daniel played a very successful free gig in The Baggot Inn , and now has plans for a new album to be recorded in Dublin in January .
2 Today , closer to Clapton ( geographically ) than he 's been in a long while , Anthony Newley is relishing the chance to prove he 's still up to a tough dramatic performance eight shows a week and , to follow , he has plans for a musicalised Richard III .
3 Although such investment will inevitably benefit US companies , especially those in equipment manufacture , steel-making and construction , there will also be opportunities for foreign companies — Clinton has plans for a high-speed rail network , for example , equipment for which is currently not made by US companies — and one can imagine a fierce ‘ Buy America ’ debate over any major public works piece of legislation .
4 The ISE has plans for a regulatory news service which will sell information to other news services , but Sir Gordon has criticised the high costs of the service to outside competitors .
5 God is a planner and he has plans for the British Isles .
6 It has plans for an industrial policy the Tories do n't appear to have one and has modelled its industrial manifesto on the demands of the CBI , the Tories traditional bedfellows .
7 In 1986 the International Whaling Commission , which has responsibility for the baleen whales , declared a moratorium on commercial whaling of the 11 great whales so that stock could be assessed .
8 It is also confusing to the inhabitants in that it is often difficult to ascertain which council has responsibility for the particular matter which concerns them .
9 ( deputy manager ) has responsibility for the day-to-day personnel affairs within the Association , and for advising on the formulation of HCIMA policy in relation to the broad manpower and employment issues .
10 He has sympathy for the small scale dealers : ‘ They 've been brought up in an entrepreneurial country under Thatcher where they 've been taught to make money .
11 All these setbacks did n't matter , old chap , because the referee only has eyes for the big boys .
12 The only relaxation presently available from the absolute prohibition against foreign lawyers ( other than those who duly obtain the professional qualifications necessary to become members of the legal profession in England and Wales ) undertaking the work of solicitors and barristers is that afforded under the European Communities ( Services of Lawyers ) Order 1978 which , as amended , has effect for the stated purpose of enabling an EC qualified lawyer to pursue his professional activities in any part of the UK by providing , subject to conditions , the services otherwise reserved to the local professions ( advocates , barristers and solicitors ) .
13 It is revolutionary too in its scope , for it has implications for a whole range of academic subjects in the arts and the social sciences .
14 The ‘ Options for Change ’ Defence Review has implications for a large number of Scottish companies .
15 This result has implications for the current value of the basis .
16 Questions about the distribution and change of power can be answered objectively by reference to a model of power relationships , which also has implications for the rational choice of foreign policies .
17 Such interaction has implications for the future behaviour of field staff , for enforcement is organized to reflect the ways in which polluters define their behaviour and the ‘ pollution ’ .
18 The changing demographic composition also has implications for the physical housing stock — trends towards non-family , smaller households suggest that the traditional three-bedroom house is becoming less appropriate for present needs .
19 Local authority borrowing has implications for the Public Sector Borrowing Requirement ( PSBR ) , the rate of monetary growth , and interest rates .
20 This view , though , has implications for the public sector where convention has it that it is the role of the politicians and not the officials to determine goals and take responsibility .
21 This kind of analysis has implications for the Marxist theory of the state .
22 ‘ If there is anything we can do at the dams , it may be that we can raise their levels by even two or three inches , but that has implications for the surrounding countryside . ’
23 This result has implications for the invariant length of a four-vector .
24 Only for five years between 1945 and 1983 has approval for the Prime Minister exceeded that of his party by more than 10 per cent , and Harold Wilson , and Harold Macmillan are the only post-war premiers to have retained the support of 50 per cent or more of the electorate for two successive years .
25 Do I take it from what the hon. Gentleman just said that he now has figures for every local authority under his proposals ?
26 As such , it has significance for the coastal communities of Wales around which there are concentrations of tanker traffic , and a growing interest in the search for new oil reserves .
27 The point that Lieberson is making is one concerning multivariate analysis but also has lessons for the cross-sectional survey .
28 The absence of alternation also has consequences for the governing elite .
29 Aids dementia is more common in those who have had AIDS for a long time , and in some instances the dementia is probably due to other organisms attacking the brain .
30 Apart from the traffic implications in grid-locking the roads of Caerphilly , up Manor way , it might even have had repercussions for the hon. Gentleman 's constituents .
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