Example sentences of "that [art] [noun pl] have a [noun] " in BNC.

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1 A plus , however , was that the fireworks have a wick , instead of blue touchpaper , so you are left in no doubt about when they are lit .
2 I think that the departments have a role to play in that .
3 The colonies had at first been left to look after themselves because the king had no money to spare for defending them nor any forces he could send across the Atlantic , but after 1650 it was accepted that the colonies had a right to expect to be protected against European attack , though not against Indian or other local problems .
4 It might be argued that the courts have a role to play in ensuring that groups which have been unfairly denied access to the policy-making arena or who have a genuine complaint about how that process was conducted , should be allowed to challenge the outcome of that process in the courts .
5 Professor Sharp , of the Memorial University of Newfoundland , writes that he has just run across the earwig after having acquired five years ' back numbers of this magazine and to say that the Anglo-Saxons had a word for it , as we are all too well aware from listening to conversations between small children .
6 Only a fool , though , would deny that the contrivances have a point ; only a very careless reader would think that the entrelacements of this romance are purely for variety , and have nothing to say about ‘ the fundamental character of reality ’ at all .
7 This itself hints that if birds are descended from dinosaurs , it is likely that the dinosaurs had a system that was different from both birds and mammals .
8 It was to ensure that the men had a chance to make a fair average wage .
9 However , the panel ruled that the protestors have a right to speak to and harass the women who come to the clinics to obtain abortions .
10 Speaking on Radio Ulster 's ‘ Inside Politics ’ programme , Mr Paisley said : ‘ If the only hope in Northern Ireland is that the politicians have a meeting and talk then there is no hope for this province from the security point of view . ’
11 To be able to take and make a role in an industrial or other commercial enterprise – requires that the individuals have a sense for themselves of their personal identities .
12 In subsequent criminal proceedings , the High Court held that the police had a power to enter and remain on private property , against the wishes of the occupier , if they reasonably apprehended either that the commission of an offence was ‘ imminent or likely ’ or that any breach of the peace was likely to occur .
13 The end result of this case is that the police have a power to enter and search any premises for the purpose of recapturing a person unlawfully at large , provided he or she has reasonable grounds for believing that the person is on those premises ( s. 17(1) ( d ) & ( 2 ) of PACE and that they have the power to use reasonable force in effecting entry and arresting the person sought ( s.117 of PACE ) .
14 Does he agree that the law should be changed so that the police have a duty rather than just a power to act under section 39 ?
15 Whatever date one ascribes to the letter , Remigius conceived of Childeric 's power in terms of Roman provincial rule , and he also thought that the clergy had a right to advise , even though the ruler might be barbarian and pagan .
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