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

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1 Faris ( 1968 ) , exploring the way such symbols come to represent complex conceptual domains , coined the phrase ‘ symbols of high meaning capacity ’ , which exactly fits the structural significance hair has for police ideology .
2 We consider below the implications this result has for policy , and in chapter 6 we show how it can serve as the basis for an empirical test of the model .
3 And as crime figures soar , Labour has for months poured scorn on the Tory claim to be the party of law and order .
4 He named his discovery ‘ eight months anxiety ’ and it gained the same status for psychologists that saying ‘ mama ’ or cutting the first tooth has for parents .
5 The volume concludes with the first country-house poem published in English , an encomium of the countess 's estate at Cookham , in which the passing of the seasons suggests the ephemerality of patronage relations ; the walks bear ‘ summer Liveries ’ , and the prospect of hills and vales appears to ‘ preferre some strange unlook 'd for sute ’ only as long as their mistress is in residence .
6 The riddle J28 on p. 39 , does not , I think , in British English , depend partly for its effect on the insertion of /r/ after the syllable in Weetabix ; in fact , it would spoil it : What do Frenchmen have for breakfast ?
7 So whether you 're tidying away some of those large toys that the kids had for Christmas , and have got fed-up with , storing a few treasures in the loft , using it as a laundry or shopping basket , or even to clear up the garden rubbish , the ‘ Monster ’ will take it .
8 Even so , initially , with the formation of a new Anti-Slavery Society in 1823 ( the African Institution had for years primarily acted on the international slave trade ) , there was no major break in abolitionist ideological assumptions .
9 Though much of the 48-minute speech was devoted to outlining policies Labour had for Britain and the wider world , it was his attacks on Mr Major that set the Blackpool Labour Conference alight .
10 And he will talk about the affection Crosby had for Ireland .
11 The England football management has for years moaned that there are no longer any easy matches , and England 's cricketers learned this salutary lesson against Sri Lanka .
12 This daily parade assumed for the bagnini something of the significance that the Changing of the Guard has for London 's tourist guides .
13 The way of life of the Dalmatian peasants and fisherfolk , and of the citizens of the former Venetian colonies of Split , Šibenik and Zadar has for centuries resembled that of the Italians on the western shore of the Adriatic rather than that of their Slav cousins who inhabit the Balkan interior .
14 Well that that depends on on how we define self containment , because erm self containment has for example a transport implication .
15 The agreement has now been reached and erm that is provided for in the amount the Council has for pay and price increases , and when we yesterday the Council agreed to cash limit it 's inflationary provision that was exclusive of teachers ' and lecturers ' pay , so that is secured , the cost is secured .
16 X receives Y's value for feature foo , and Y receives the value that Z has for feature baz .
17 Britain 's withdrawal from India or France 's loss of Algeria , painful though they were , were easy in comparison with the profound political and psychological implications that Ukrainian independence has for Russians .
18 As MP for Derby from 1868 to 1880 Plimsoll had for years attacked the shipowning interest and the government which supported it hip and thigh on the unnecessary loss of life and property at sea , attracting great publicity in 1875 by being ordered to retire from the House of Commons following a particularly violent denunciation of their callous and self-interested behaviour .
19 Korea had for centuries been an independent nation ( though within the Chinese orbit ) .
20 The houses of the great in England had for centuries served as the model for the aspiring middle classes .
21 At the same time , American anthropologists are acutely aware , to the point of self-caricature , that the North American Indians have for generations provided a conveniently accessible exotic backyard for ethnographic research .
22 To be more specific , justification for the Reed Elsevier merger lies to a significant extent in the enlarged scope that the merged group has for acquisitions .
23 The staple crop has for centuries been rice , and wet-rice agriculture has been of crucial significance in the evolution of Japanese society .
24 Soviet spokesmen could argue that although the USSR had for decades proselytised the notion of a national liberation or solidarity ‘ front ’ of Third World states , aligned at least politically to the Soviet bloc , it had not created regional groupings or coalitions of states militarily tied to the USSR or the Warsaw Pact and it had supported the opposition of the non-aligned states to military blocs .
25 Robert had for Christmas .
26 For all these reasons some economists have for years advocated this approach to monetary policy and during the 1970s a number of governments began at least to pay lip service to it by announcing target rates of growth for the money supply over the coming year .
27 First , there are the needs which individuals have for self-actualization , development of capabilities and other sources of job satisfaction and motivation which may not be satisfied by the organization .
28 Tonks has for months been juggling the possibility of an All Black tour to South Africa next year — something close to his heart — but was aware that the continuing divisions between the rugby groups in the Republic made such a tour impossible .
29 ‘ An advance guard of hundreds of men , with bulldozers , mechanical shovels , tractors and lorries has for months been scarring the lowlands , daubing the green acres with splashes of grey clay and red earth in a mariner unseen since Beaker Folk raised their burial mounds or Saxons threw up ramparts on surrounding hills .
30 And what consequences do these principles have for children 's acquisition of the lexicon ?
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