Example sentences of "of [noun] [verb] do [prep] the " in BNC.

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1 On the way home from school that afternoon she began to mull over the various possibilities , and when at last the germ of a brilliant idea hit her , she began to expand on it and lay her plans with the same kind of care the Duke of Wellington had done before the Battle of Waterloo .
2 Erm yes , Mr Chairman I should like to apologise to Bob for interrupting him then because er the enthusiasm about the green code business of course has to do with the Hatfield community project and is not initiated by Welwyn Hatfield when in the use er Herts County Council Paul in the community project , but nevertheless the green cone idea is the individual person , it 's not the District Council and it 's not somebody else taking a taking green erm green type away for composting .
3 The second aim of college has to do with the encouragement of individual difference and the development of personality .
4 The principles of pedagogy have to do with the craft of teaching .
5 One set of aspirations has to do with the development of new forms of service for clients and their carers or families ; another with the direct provision of services .
6 Either House may set up a committee of inquiry into any matter it wishes , as the House of Commons chose to do on the occasion of the Aberfan disaster of 1966 .
7 Srisa Chandra Vasu says in his preface to the Ashyadhyayi , ‘ What the geometry of Euclid has done towards the development of the Western intellect , the Ashtadhyayi fulfils in India ’ .
8 The lack of priority given to teaching singing to ordinands is explained by one respondent who wrote , ‘ Part of the problem with the teaching of singing has to do with the relative infrequency with which the Sunday Offices are now sung …
9 Concepts like labour organized life in much the same way as the notion of God had done in the Middle Ages , and it had as little material reference .
10 Lord Denning as Master of the Rolls fought long and hard to persuade his colleagues that the Court of Appeal should free itself from the fetter of being bound by its own previous decisions just as the House of Lords had done in the 1966 Practice Statement ( see below ) , and also suggested that the Court of Appeal was free to refuse to follow decisions of the House of Lords which were considered to be clearly wrong ( Carty , 1983 ) .
11 One set of issues has to do with the way in which science and technology so drastically alter previous patterns of life that they erode and undermine the social , ethical and spiritual values which had been encapsulated and preserved in them .
12 It is reasonable to say , therefore , that some aspects of language have to do with the referential function of language , and that these must be distinguished from those which have to do with stylistic variation .
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