Example sentences of "[adv] [adv] as have " in BNC.

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1 So the practice has been to regard them rather unofficially as having been satisfied if there is compliance on about … three occasions out of four , or four out of five , or two out of three — practices are variable from one authority to another .
2 In this more temperate climate , we can see that rock 's estate is a grand one , and it 's tempting to tramp its grounds — necessary , perhaps , if only so as to have somewhere to ‘ go ’ .
3 The couple went so far as to have Chris Nixon , one of the best unit publicists in the business , fired .
4 In Gloucester in 1831 all three candidates adopted an antislavery stance as a result of being questioned , one going so far as to have ‘ cards in his constituent hats with ‘ No Slavery ’ printed up on them ’ .
5 He had my lord 's entire confidence — indeed it is hard to credit that anyone could change so radically as has my uncle . ’
6 He and Matchsticks blended in perfectly as had been predicted back in Teheran .
7 Richard was still not allowed to speak — he was not recovering quite so fast as had been expected — and he could make little reply when Laura told him that this was exactly the kind of thing she had expected all along , and that she would see about disposing of Lord Jim immediately .
8 He had left home so hurriedly as to have packed not one of the poetry volumes that he was very seldom without .
9 This was essential to the development of many zones , but not necessarily as had been anticipated .
10 It was better to stop every day 's travel early so as to have good energy for raising a tent , digging an igloo , building a platform up a tree .
11 They certainly would be required for an inner relief road erm to function effec as effectively as has been suggested at this E I P .
12 The fact that the long-stay population was not declining as rapidly as had been thought meant an expensive ‘ double running ’ situation .
13 Her temperature was not falling as rapidly as had been expected , and this , he feared , had been caused by her determination to get out of bed too soon .
14 ‘ We 'd only got as far as having a preliminary psyche dissection on Daine , ’ said Trefusis , ‘ but the Yggdrasil probes suggest he had a similar-although far more pronounced — set of personality deformities .
15 Most people who have testicular cancer and who are treated for it and cured go on to lead perfectly active normal lives as far as having children is concerned .
16 The Company was pleased to accept , but things did not progress as smoothly as had been anticipated .
17 Only in the last ten years or so had he been able to give up going to the country towns and villages for uncomfortable , if lucrative , one- or two-day visits ; only then had he found it possible to move from Jewtown to commodious rooms in Patrick Street , Cork 's main thoroughfare , where he could live as well as have his surgery .
18 ‘ Well , he not only refuses his tithes but seems to have a source of wealth which enables him to distribute alms , to mend the church as well as have it painted and refurbished . ’
19 She says we are looking for people who can pull a crowd as well as have a bit of fun .
20 In spite of the recession the PSBR continued to fall , though not as fast as had been forecast .
21 Since fuel is a major part of a coal station 's running costs , the fact that prices were not rising nearly as fast as had been expected would have a fundamental impact on the future cost of coal-fired electricity .
22 What is more , the countries of Europe who are not members of the EEC have increased their trade at least as fast as have those of the Community , and there is no EEC country other than Luxembourg which has a per capita income higher than any ( except Austria ) of the Efta countries .
23 Since our first arrival here , their Seductive Highnesses had flirted with us as consistently as had their father ensured that we were together only during public occasions .
24 However , even if bus networks have not declined as markedly as has , say , the rail network , frequency of services has usually declined and fares have increased .
25 Like every other class and institution , the nobility was tested in the crisis of 1808 and the French invasion : it does not seem to have failed in this test as completely as has been asserted .
26 If a large number of As have been observed under a wide variety of conditions , and if all those observed As without exception possessed the property B , then all As have the property B.
27 Stressing the apparent universality , intractability and unacceptability of the problem of violence , the theories prominent in Anglo-Saxon lay ideas focus strongly on the irrationality and bestiality of violence … the approach to violence advocated in the discipline of ethology — in which violence is seen at least partly as having genetic determinants — is rather close to Anglo-Saxon folk ideas .
28 The southern States stand out very strongly as having experienced a Democratic hegemony then , as they did for the entire century beforehand .
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