Example sentences of "have [vb pp] [adv] [prep] a [adj] " in BNC.
Next pageNo | Sentence |
---|---|
1 | Across ashen , unredeemable scenes , Shakespeare 's words resound with redoubled force and humanity ; they sound almost ironic , in their fruitless reaching towards the images and emotions which have drained away from a soulless , monochrome universe . |
2 | Moreover , many of the issues have spilled over in a marked renewal of interest in the state in the last twenty years . |
3 | And at the moment , all five of them have joined together on a single campaign , which is about trade . |
4 | College lecturers have voted overwhelmingly for a one-day strike and a total ban on flexible working over pay , the National Association of Teachers in Further and Higher Education announced yesterday . |
5 | All the little steps have added up to a high achievement . |
6 | BIOTECHNOLOGISTS have come up with a surprising new way of repairing many scars and wrinkles — using purified cow-hide . |
7 | It has to be said that , with this membrane idea , BOSS have come up with a brilliant way of programming the ME-10 . |
8 | By studying regions of the proteins the proteinase cuts , they have come up with a small molecule that can block this scissor action . |
9 | The Beatles/Stones/Kinks/Peters And Lee have come up with a real smasher this time |
10 | Buffallo , however , have come up with a good trowel at a very modest price . |
11 | Following new yarn developments in France , Charnos have come up with a beautiful lustrous leg look that is built for comfort — ‘ Sheer Lustre ’ tights at £2.99 with 10 denier appearance leg . |
12 | A group of US magazine publishers have come up with a novel weapon for the US Information Agency 's propaganda efforts in Eastern Europe : their unsold magazines . |
13 | LISBURN have come up with a novel way of raising much-needed cash for the club . |
14 | Recognising that a lot of women are taking to the hills , and that they may feel a little intimidated by such a male-orientated sport , especially since they all dress in the same fluffy things as us now , I have come up with a startling new innovation . |
15 | Now Cystic Fibrosis researchers in Oxford have come up with a potential cure . |
16 | Cyclists and the Forestry Commission have come up with a special scheme , policed by rangers on mountgain bikes , cyclists are allowed anywhere in the forest , apart from 3 nature reserves which are out of bounds and families as well , as the more energetic are catered for with an 11 mile trail along disused railway tracks . |
17 | With the breakdown of the administration , crime syndicates have come up in a big way . |
18 | The improvements have come not in a dramatic way but week by week over a number of months . |
19 | You have come back in a funny mood . |
20 | However , they have come home to a safe place where they know they are loved and that it is safe to have their tantrums . |
21 | For the first time staff concerned with mapping and interpreting crustal structure in the third dimension have come together in a single division , Thematic Maps and Onshore Surveys ( TMOS ) . |
22 | That would be a mistake : this is one of the most satisfying and interesting CDs I have come across in a long while . |
23 | However , a greater proportion of secondary school teachers than either of the other two phases tend to be unsure about whether any of these changes have come about as a direct result of the review and report . |
24 | On a hundred occasions I have idled similarly in a deserted croft in the Highlands of Scotland and wondered about the lives that had been lived in it . |
25 | Accordingly , where humanities scholars have engaged the computer in text creation and analysis , they have done so in a sophisticated way . |
26 | High prices and a determination to stick to plain , some say ‘ dull ’ pieces , meant that they have missed out on a growing market for decorative items in the lower price range , while the move to new premises essentially changed their image from a shop to a ‘ view by appointment ’ private gallery . |
27 | Marketers in the Anglo-Saxon cultures have moved closer to a pan-European approach than their Latin counterparts , the survey adds . |
28 | The use of ‘ strong ’ is significant because we have moved now from a weak , lifeless stance to a healthier , more robust one . |
29 | Partnerships in the UK are a contemporary feature ; in their present incarnation they date from the mid 1980s and since then have grown remarkably into a national phenomenon . |
30 | ‘ As a farmer whose children have grown up on a busy farm , I am very aware of the risks and the work pressures that all too easily lead to children being exposed to danger . |