Example sentences of "[adj] had [adj] [noun pl] " in BNC.
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1 | This had variable effects on work patterns . |
2 | Naturally this had immediate consequences for the destitute fed by the church chest that rich believers funded . |
3 | Gregory knew he was writing in a rustic style , and he thought that this had certain advantages in terms of its accessibility to the intended audience . |
4 | For this had revolutionary effects on agriculture , on food manufacture , on retailing , and on diet . |
5 | This had ominous implications for a party whose political strength in the 1980s had rested to a large extent on its competence in managing economic prosperity . |
6 | This had small panes of glass set in a large cast-iron frame . |
7 | This had serious implications for Chapter III courses as the LEA was not prepared to make any substantial financial contribution in support of rural adult education activities , even though the county 's Secretary for Education , H. M. Spink , was a part-time WEA tutor . |
8 | This had serious implications for the ultimate fate of massive stars . |
9 | This had immense implications . |
10 | This had obvious advantages for the government , but set political limits to the sums that might be raised . |
11 | This had obvious implications for methodology which went beyond the simpler objectives of transferring information from teacher to student . |
12 | And this had profound consequences for the functioning of each system . |
13 | This had profound effects on the way the farm was run and how the future was viewed . |
14 | The Egyptian Moses was murdered , Freud claims , and this had profound implications for Jewish religion . |
15 | This had important implications for the debate over access to birth control information and abortion — rarely were demands for freer access to birth control information devoid of maternalist rhetoric . |
16 | On a more pragmatic , but related , issue , students were finding it harder to ‘ pass ’ inference skills IN 1–3 , than IN 4–6 , and since this had important implications for their grading , I was attempting to remediate the early skills on an ad hoc basis with some non-subject-specific pencil and paper exercises . |
17 | Such LDCs subsequently found it difficult to service external debts and this had grave implications for the world 's financial system . |
18 | The situation might or might not have been different had other ports come out resolutely in favour of the London men . |
19 | The EC summit in June 1989 agreed to achieve this first stage in July 1990 but set no dates for further progress and , yet again , the British had important doubts about the proposal . |
20 | Of the 17 patients with malignant strictures , four had resections , 12 had palliative procedures , and one patient with an unresectable lesion was managed without surgery . |
21 | For example , analyses of the 1984–6 Labour Force Survey suggest that over a quarter of married and cohabiting Afro-Caribbean women ( and Afro-Caribbean men ) aged under 30 had white partners ( CSO , 1988 ) . |
22 | Some had tall towers and steeples like the Town Hall at Arras ( restored in 1919 ) . |
23 | Some had certain advantages , or were more reliable , but none was markedly superior . |
24 | let me give you one example , there are many of these developments had flat roofs did n't they ? , not all of them , but some had flat roofs |
25 | Some had strong traditions of liberal studies inherited from the NCTA arrangements . |
26 | The majority contained inadequate amounts of alcohol and dried fruit and some had artificial flavourings or were cloyingly sweet . |
27 | So some people were very low academic people , some had physical problems , and er , some had er , combination of problems , erm which er very often you would find er combination of problems . |
28 | Some had national flags flying from their rucksacks so we hung out a tiny Scottish Saltire . |
29 | Some had excessive swings of mood , and were either excessively energetic or elated , or , more often , inert and plagued by beliefs of their own worthlessness and guilt ; the manic-depressive psychosis . |
30 | Some were more active than any predecessor against some particular organism , and some had special merits in use , such as working when given by mouth , or acting for a longer period than usual . |