Example sentences of "not have the [noun] of [noun sg] " in BNC.

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1 In contrast , a small or medium-sized business will require greater competence and versatility from its top management , because they will not have the benefits of support from functional specialists which are available to the top managers of large organisations .
2 Speed wants to come inside ( he really wants to play central mid-field , Strachan does not have the change of pace to beat a full-back any more .
3 While other microcomputers are cheaper than the BBC range , at present they do not have the range of software available to meet school needs .
4 For , as Kalven and Zeisel noted , often when juries acquit of rape , their ‘ stance is not so much that involuntary intercourse under these circumstances is no crime at all , but rather does not have the gravity of rape . ’
5 The intermediate day was spent travelling across the Karo , a desert landscape , hot and dusty , and the trains did not have the benefit of air conditioning .
6 The real question that the hon. Gentleman should put is to his own party : how will it keep tax and spending plans going if it does not have the benefit of privatisation revenues ?
7 Today a President really does not have the kind of clout with the Congress that he had thirty years ago , even in matters that affect national security . ’
8 If the person using the expert system does not have the degree of skill and knowledge contained in the system he should make this clear to the client and obtain his agreement prior to using the system .
9 The applicant receivers are not , therefore , administrative receivers within the meaning of section 29(2) of the Act of 1986 and they do not have the powers of office holders which they wish to use .
10 It is also worth noting that in Edinburgh Scottish English , phonologically prominent syllables are typically uttered with raised or high pitch and need not have the type of pitch movement associated with phonological prominence in descriptions of standard southern English ( cf.
11 The racism which these YCs were sharing , did not have the tone of bitterness or fear , which was frequently encountered in the talks with white working-class youngsters .
12 This meant that the USSR did not have the security of tenure stipulated by such treaties .
13 However , the implementation of the Directive , when adopted , may require a fundamental change in the present voluntary system under which takeover bids for UK public companies are regulated by a voluntary body ( the Panel on Takeovers and Mergers ) under the City Code , which does not have the force of law although its decisions may be reviewed by the courts .
14 A reservation to this effect is contained in section 2(2) of the Act of 1990 , which provides that , inter alia , paragraph 10(1) ( e ) of the Rome Convention shall not have the force of law in the United Kingdom .
15 Codes do not have the force of law in their own right , but are nevertheless very influential when a court is determining the rights and wrongs of a situation .
16 One problem with professional standards , because they do not have the force of law , is ensuring compliance .
17 Although the City Code does not have the force of law , those who wish to take advantage of the facilities of the securities markets in the UK are expected to conduct themselves in matters relating to takeovers according to the City Code .
18 It will not have the force of law , the commission stresses , but will merely exert ’ moral pressure ’ .
19 Although the guidelines do not have the force of law , they do influence the doctors ' judgement .
20 The guidelines do not have the force of law but are persuasive given the power of institutional shareholders .
21 As mentioned in para 3.2 above , it does not have the force of law , but it does reflect what the City considers to be best practice in the conduct of takeovers .
22 The right hon. Gentleman made a statement in the House about a fast track procedure under which some applicants would be sifted out immediately and would not have the right of appeal — at least not the right of audience in an appeal or representation in an appeal .
23 The two great strengths , he thought , were that the mystery plays were the beginning of drama in this country and that , although a modern audience would not have the universality of faith of a medieval one , the plays held the power of universal mythology , everyone knowing the stories being retold .
24 We , being their regular suppliers , do not have the option of action that neither helps nor hinders .
25 If the Government do not have the power of veto and we risk having those directives imposed on us , it is an extremely serious matter .
26 But Saracen arrows did not have the power of penetration necessary to pierce the heavy mail hauberks of the Christian knights , and whenever their numbers were inferior they were frequently overwhelmed by the sheer weight and ferocity of their opponents .
27 We simply do not have the sums of money being asked . ’
28 Inevitably , the interlude material should not have the strength of character of the main section material .
29 The Commission is present at the political co-operation meetings , which proves useful and important , but it does not have the monopoly of initiative , as it would have if the meetings took place under the treaty of Rome .
30 The second is that the statutory services do not have the monopoly of altruism or the monopoly of occupying the high moral ground , and I think that those of you who saw the presentation given yesterday afternoon by Mike O'Reilly on the work that 's being done at Knowesouth , the private home he and his wife run , would have to concede that that was an excellent example of the kind of not only interesting , but the kind of pushing forward the boundaries of what can be done in different kinds of settings for people with dementia .
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