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

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1 He is also expected to have complete trust in his opponent in spite of all indications to the contrary .
2 Inclusive of the manor of Clipsham his Rutland property alone exceeded £12 in value , and from Buckinghamshire he drew a further £43.2 As a gentleman , the absentee William Dall ( or Dale ) could also be expected to have other property , and was in fact lord of the neighbouring manor of Tickencote , where he resided .
3 The research is expected to have major implications for application of Decision Analysis , a widely used management decision aid .
4 To conclude , therefore , the enforcement of essentially procedural decision-making standards is within the capacity of the courts and might reasonably be expected to have beneficial effects .
5 While younger pupils can not be expected to have great depth of understanding and indeed will not reach a mature conceptual level of historical understanding until their mid-teens , none the less the initial building bricks in the process can be laid from the very beginning of the pupil 's school career .
6 inspectors are expected to have intimate knowledge and continuing experience of the classroom ;
7 On the other hand , in a Keynesian model where an increase in the supply of money can generally be expected to have real effects , i.e. where output will rise , the private sector will be able rationally to predict these quantity effects from the correct model ( in this case Keynesian ) which is included in the information set .
8 Parents are expected to have total confidence in the school yet schools do n't often reciprocate trust and confidence in the judgement and goodwill of parents .
9 They were all expected to have similar properties , but , prudently , in some clinics the new substances were given to patients with conditions other than those in which chlorpromazine and its allies were usually effective .
10 The decision is expected to have widespread implications in connection with liquidators ' attempts to recover other bank debts with UK companies .
11 For example , a child who has difficulty perceiving pictorial materials may be expected to have considerable difficulties with any test which uses pictures as part of the elicitation procedure for reasons other than poor linguistic ability .
12 The members of the Battalion mess were so superior , it seemed , that they were expected to have unlimited funds at their disposal .
13 Iraq 's invasion in August of Kuwait , and the Saudi Arabian government 's subsequent decision to invite coalition forces to defend the kingdom was expected to have profound effects on internal political and economic affairs .
14 Thus liberal arts courses might be expected to have different aims from vocational or professional ones , theoretical courses will differ from applied ones , and undergraduate courses will differ from those in the same subject at A level .
15 Curran also revealed that the Dublin soccer writers , most of whom appear to have written-off Derry 's challenge , have provided the motivation that might just make the difference .
16 Built to a 24½″ scale , the necks are maple and appear to have genuine rosewood fingerboards .
17 We have seen that theories in the social sciences often appear to have irreducible value-components which may render them fundamentally incompatible with one another .
18 The two indices appear to have equal validity in measuring the relative change in price or quantity levels between two periods .
19 This does not apply to matters of general interest , although some senior officers appear to have strange interpretations of their own .
20 Mainstream elitism is now represented by writers such as Keller and Aron , as we discussed earlier ; this refers mainly to the interactions and functions of ruling and strategic elites , and though it differs in emphasis from earlier writings , these writers appear to have normative assumptions not radically removed from those of the classical elite theorists .
21 First decide on just two matches that appear to have outstanding draw chances and mark them X in the first column of the Treble Chance ( to the right of the fixtures ) .
22 Nevertheless he points out that in Britain we appear to have industrial malaise , adversary politics and a society that is different in quality compared to other developed European countries .
23 Some of these lenses appear to have selective absorption at certain wavelengths , and there can be distinct changes in perceived CL colour when such lenses are interchanged during viewing of a single sample .
24 IBM and Hewlett-Packard appear to have other fish to fry .
25 I was surprised to find that hospitals appear to have standard forms of refusal to accept a blood transfusion and was dismayed at the layout of the form used in this case .
26 They did not , however , appear to have sole rights at Tilberthwaite for there was an annoyance this year when a small company working on the Baron 's land , encroached onto Coniston ground , and illegally mined ore rightfully allowed to Taylor & Co .
27 This acoustic ability of pet cats explains why they sometimes appear to have supernatural powers .
28 In addition , the clergy appear to have considerable difficulty in recognizing the transformation which theoretical positions on Christian belief and morality undergo as they are concretized in historical human relationships , doubtless also because of the strong essentialist bias in their perception of socio-ethical issues .
29 Unlike subject-prominent languages such as English , French , and German , topic-prominent languages appear to have double subjects .
30 In Switzerland and in the regions adjoining the Caucasus mountains , ancient humans even appear to have dry-stored apple-halves for winter .
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