Example sentences of "[noun] have [adj] [noun] " in BNC.

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1 Their extra wide tyres cushion you perfectly over the roughest of roads and each bike has easy-to-use gears .
2 Rodber has huge potential , however , a great physique , a fair turn of speed and good hands .
3 The Ministry of Agriculture has overall responsibility , but operational control lies with the National Rivers Authority and district councils .
4 " Did you ever notice , " he said to Kate , " Miss Lavant has bad teeth ? "
5 NEC Corp has new MIPS Computer Systems Inc R4000 RISC-based servers and workstations : two new models in its SuperServer UP4800 series and three new models in the EWS4800 workstation series .
6 And it reckons there is very little standing in its way — according to Parker , its four major competitors have nothing to rival the new product — Dun & Bradstreet Software Corp has incompatible products ; SAP AG is strong in Germany and other continental countries but not in the UK ; Walker Interactive Systems Inc offers purely mainframe software ; and Computer Associates International Inc has a poor reputation for financial packages .
7 Trehane has new camellias bred from the indoor reticulata species with very large flowers .
8 Craig Gwladys — Next to Penscynor Wildlife Park , this area of woodland has waymarked footpaths and picnic areas with spectacular views of the Dulais an Neath Valleys .
9 The ‘ counter-power ’ of the state enterprise in relation to the controlling authorities has major consequences for the way in which control is exerted .
10 Male has shrill whistle female a repeated deep ‘ whoor ’ .
11 Male has white tips to outer tail feathers and three white spots on outer wing quills .
12 Male has squeaky trill , female wheezy hiss and repeated ‘ ook ’ in display , also low croak .
13 The re launch of Asbach Uralt in its centenary year was supported by new packaging and a new advertising campaign in Germany The brand has tremendous strength amongst more traditional consumers , but its long term growth is dependent upon extending its appeal amongst young adults .
14 The stereo soundtrack has different information on each channel , so that sequences can be played twice with a different soundtrack each time .
15 Long straight hair has timeless appeal .
16 This aspect of the story has shocking implications as a representative of what might appear to be the random and unjust way by which salvation may be achieved — although St Peter always wins .
17 Such a change of direction has major implications for the way services are delivered and for staff roles .
18 ICL HAS SOLARIS-COMPATIBLE UNIX SYSTEM V.4.2 FOR DESKTOPS AND SERVERS …
19 The squat cupola has fan-shaped windows , and the all-seeing eye in the centre of its ceiling suggests a certain Masonic influence .
20 The effect of non-jurisdictional error of law is different ; the affected decision has legal effect from the very beginning because although it is wrong in law it is not illegal .
21 As the program time needed to send each step command is likely to be much less than 0.1 ms the processor has spare capacity for other tasks .
22 Initial assessment to see whether the sufferer has addictive disease at all .
23 may occur earlier when sufferer has regular contacts with family/friends ; lives in a rural community or is in sheltered housing .
24 Insomnia is a common complaint in which the sufferer has poor sleep that is often broken many times during the course of the night .
25 Determined belief in the capacity for self control results in pride that the sufferer has special standards and abilities that others lack .
26 A change in crop mix , perhaps also in crop planting technology and field preparation has strong implications for soil conservation , but the additional inputs required , particularly of labour , put strains on the reciprocal labour arrangements .
27 But driver has dodgy implications if you 're a copper .
28 Nor , more abstractedly , could it be the result of a perspective on the informational content of the brain ; for , in either case , the perspective would have to be the occurrence of some further brain or informational state and to both of these the scientist has complete access , and the problem reoccurs .
29 As long as the social scientist has adequate documentation on the data , the entities recorded , the variables covered and their possible values , he or she can proceed with analysis ( Marker , Reinke and Schürer 1987 ) .
30 Once a scientist has universal laws and theories at his disposal , it is possible for him to derive from them various consequences that serve as explanations and predictions .
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