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

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1 Now I know one or two people who said they 've had such terrible headaches
2 But the A O's do n't , they 've had one , two they 've had one new A A to date
3 They 've had that fresh fruit have n't they ?
4 They 've had some good results themselves recently ( thanks to Chappie ) , and we did well to avoid dropping points .
5 They 've had some good ideas though .
6 People say they 've had some big ones .
7 The difference is they 've had more good days than we 've had .
8 It has to though because if in the pa if they 've had this long-term sort of culture for all this time they need to be given ideas but essentially if their traditional values were so strong they would have rejected what the Communist Party was trying to say , but because they accepted it it meant they ha they did actually have the potential to be revolutionary .
9 But Bosnian Serbs refused to let the convoy pass , saying they had had insufficient advance notice , said Judith Kumin of the United Nations ' High Commissioner for Refugees in Belgrade .
10 They had had two large whiskies in the bar downstairs , and they were now near the end of a bottle of Château Margaux .
11 Billy had been a close friend for over a year now and they had had some good times together .
12 Why they have to have such complicated names for these , Road Community Day Nursery .
13 Certainly , they have had little lasting impact on teaching practices .
14 They have had two bad years , and now they are recouping themselves " .
15 In fact , they have had two 13-year sessions since the war .
16 Biogas plants are already a familiar sight in China and India , although they have had some unforeseen side effects , such as depriving the very poorest people of a source of cow dung .
17 Their explanation relies on the ‘ turnover costs ’ that would be involved : the fact that insiders are more productive because they have had more on-the-job training ; that such training may well come from insiders who on being sacked will not be there to supply it ; that harassment via picket lines , the ‘ angry silence ’ , etc. , can be employed even by displaced insiders , that the unpopular act of replacing a whole work-force is likely to cost the firm in terms of lost' good-will ‘ .
18 Courts , if they had been called upon to investigate people 's employment protection rights , might well have deemed some of them to have had one continuous employment relationship broken only by shortages of work rather than a series of different relationships .
19 Solihull teachers were strongly so , but it should be recalled that only a relatively small proportion of them had had any direct experience of the process .
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