Example sentences of "has [verb] [art] high [noun] of " in BNC.

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1 Holye suggests that traditionally the individual teacher has enjoyed a high degree of autonomy in the essential professional activity of teaching , but that teachers have had relatively little influence over the broader aspects of school life because of a very limited involvement in decision making ( management ) .
2 For a given outlay of local currency it has ensured a higher value of imports than would have been available under a market valuation of the currency .
3 And up until now , it has pumped a high level of turnover back into just such research and development — out of £820,000 sales for the fiscal year ending March 1992 , some £213,000 went on this activity , while for the year ending March 1993 , the figure was more like £414,000 , out of total revenues of only £922,000 .
4 Alongside this , one has to set a high degree of tolerance , dependency , held by unskilled workers [ whom we interviewed ] .
5 To keep juries for all crown court trials including fraud — the Commission 's own research has shown a high level of satisfaction with the jury system and their ability to understand the evidence .
6 This study has shown a high prevalence of H pylori infection in the parents of children who are H pylori positive .
7 Indeed , ever since the Queensberry era began in 1892 every weight division has had a high proportion of middle-class world champions and contenders — men for whom deprivation was having T-bone steaks only twice instead of thrice a week [ see table ] .
8 Blackburn has had a high level of female participation in its labour market for over a century .
9 This means that claims by UK citizens under the Convention must always be pursued to the European Court of Human Rights in Strasbourg to obtain judgment , with the result that the UK has had the highest number of judgments made against it by the European Court of Human Rights for one or more violations of the Convention 's terms .
10 The District Council has accommodated the highest proportion of Greater York growth of all the districts surrounding York over the last ten years , and therefore I think it likely that it would expected to accommodate the largest proportion of the fourteen hundred dwellings that would be accommodated in the new settlement , erm I do not think that any of the settlements or that there is sufficient land within the Southern Ryedale area to accommodate that level of development without adversely affecting character of the settlements , or compromising greenbelt objectives , as I mentioned this morning , and also I question whether or not erm whether th most of the settlements in the Southern Ryedale area have only a minimal s minimal service base anyway on which to tack any large housing growths , and I do n't necessarily foresee any subsequent rise in the service base of those settlements as a result of the housing being added on to them .
11 Midsummer has become the high point of the operatic year in London , especially where new work is concerned .
12 But recession has blighted the high hopes of the late 1980s .
13 Finally , it must be stressed that increases or changes in the rate of work should only be carried out once a person has attained a high standard of physical fitness .
14 A study has linked the high rate of birth defects in a Hungarian village to pesticide use at a local fish farm .
15 The ISE has plans for a regulatory news service which will sell information to other news services , but Sir Gordon has criticised the high costs of the service to outside competitors .
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