Example sentences of "has [vb pp] [adv] [adv] [adv] [conj] " in BNC.

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1 The 1st class return from Bishop 's Castle to Plowden although very dirty has come out quite well and is interesting as a late printing .
2 A side-effect of the right of citizens to make foreign exchange deposits has been that , as inflation has continued and accelerated , the dinar value of these deposits has grown much more rapidly than the value of dinar assets held by households .
3 Since the stock of dinar assets held by households has risen much more slowly than this , the proportion of household assets held in foreign exchange accounts has steadily grown : while in 1980 this proportion was less than 40 per cent , by the end of 1986 it had reached nearly 70 per cent .
4 Turtle Island who won at Royal Ascot , Leopardstown and York has done most so far but at this point in time I could n't make up my mind between Turtle Island and my other two big race winners , State Performer and Stonehatch .
5 " He has done so so often and in so many places that neither employers , nor agitators , nor his sailors pay much attention to his words " .
6 He has ventured as far afield as Cathay and Lustria and has aided armies both human and High Elf against the forces of evil .
7 ( Adorno 's ingenious but unpersuasive attempt to rescue Beethoven from these contradictory circumstances of reproduction relies on a post facto construction of the ‘ real ’ Beethoven : ‘ unity has become clear only today and largely through the efforts of later production in music ’ ( Adorno 1978b : 149 ) . )
8 Guildford has counted almost as fast as Torbay — but not quite .
9 Greek and Roman objects were the first works the Met acquired after its founding in 1870 , but in recent years the department has figured far less prominently than other areas which have undergone elaborate reinstallation .
10 12.55:THIS race has cut up quite badly and it will be a major surprise if LORD RELIC does not collect .
11 The work started in northern Scotland and has progressed southwards as far as North Wales .
12 Has worked as far afield as the University of Otago [ New Zealand ] .
13 On numerous occasions the succession has passed to near relatives ; at other times an entirely new dynasty has taken over either peaceably or otherwise .
14 I think er the original plan would have envisaged er a very high proportion of that work having been converted to a fixed price at this point in the programme because according to the original programme not only would the aircraft have flown but we would be entering production investment at this stage and we would there be be fairly confident about the er maturity of the design , however the programme has proceeded much more slowly than originally planned and the amount of er the price that has been converted to a fixed price is indeed quite modest er we have in fact I think only converted eight of the price packages to a fixed price er basis so far .
15 Another is that it has survived this far only because of a remarkable social cohesiveness ( in which traditional fatalistic passivity may have played an important part ) .
16 Since then the picture has changed incredibly fast so that now it seems possible that the extinction that took place in Java may be repeated .
17 ‘ The pitch has held together reasonably well and the conditions have not changed that much from the first day .
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