Example sentences of "is [verb] to have [det] [adj] [noun] " in BNC.

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1 Dazel is expected to have some big-name customer wins .
2 In other words , the adversary system is said to have both economic costs and political costs .
3 There is also the practical point that an investor wishing to share in the fortunes of say , the oil service industry is better off buying Schlumberger straight than Pearson , which is seen to have all that publishing clutter .
4 It 's certainly something we 're all gon na have too er adjust too , thank you for pointing it out that the United States is going to have such enormous influence er from , from now on , we 're all going to have to get used to it and er get used to how to deal with it .
5 Firstly the process of moving down towards our S S A needs to be facilitated because my own instinct is that the government , faced with all sorts of financial tribulations , is going to take a harder and harder nosed attitude towards local government expenditure , as it will unfortunately with an awful lot of the rest of what we have come to expect over the decades to be the responsibility of central government , clearly the current expenditure review is going to have some nasty shocks in it for consumers of account services , consumers of other assets of the welfare state but particularly I would suspect , the local government .
6 Er the County Council can not look at an individual building and say , this is a particular piece of land which is going to be developed and this is going to have this particular impact on the environment .
7 Stamford is reputed to have several ancient tunnels , although after the Dissolution in 1539 many of them were either destroyed or blocked off .
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