Example sentences of "[conj] have [prep] [art] " in BNC.

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1 Taking these factors into account , it is possible to list a range of forms of procedure which are , or have in the past been , found in national legislation and in practice under international conventions .
2 Upon finding the wreck the FORI hope to be able to identify the serial plates on the engines of the aircraft , proving that this aircraft was the mount of Saint-Exupery , thereby laying to rest the many mysteries and rumours that have over the years surrounded his death .
3 Words that have in the last fifteen years or so , become synonymous with the name of Hood Yacht Systems .
4 The three excerpts reproduced here demonstrate the complexity of the issue of family allowance or child benefit , and the mixture of motives and alliances that have in the past , and may in future , be generated by it .
5 This allows a number of things to take place : ( a ) the investors can progress or complete the syndication of the investment ; ( b ) inter-group accounts and guarantees can be resolved ; ( c ) Newco can set up its own pension scheme or organise the provision of services that have in the past been provided by the vendors .
6 The wine that have in the bog , is that a cheap wine ?
7 Call us on 01– or write to 1 Savoy Hill , London WC2R 0BP for a copy of our brochure and have over a century of experience available to you and your family .
8 Nevertheless , the gap between movements of this kind ( which have sometimes been called ‘ pre-political ’ ) and modern social movements remains large , for the latter exist on a vastly greater scale , are more directly involved in political conflict , are influenced by more rigorous and elaborate ideologies , and have as a rule a more enduring , less ephemeral , character .
9 Policemen are not usually intellectuals and have as a rule a distrust of them as animals of a different breed .
10 They used to work say one week and have about a month off or go on the dole for a month .
11 Both may find a certain irony in the fact that some of the CPF industrial co-operatives founded in the 1880s are still trading successfully , while many retail co-operatives have failed , and have in the process of rescue become assimilated into other societies , so losing their individual identities and the reality of the democratic practice they are meant to activate , From well over 1,000 retail societies in the 1930s , the number has dwindled to 100 ; and the possibility of reducing it to 25 has been discussed ( see Chapter 1 above ) .
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