Example sentences of "[conj] having [adv] [art] " in BNC.

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1 South of Loch Hourn is the wilderness of Knoydart known as the Rough Bounds , a region entirely without motor roads and having only a few lonely and unfrequented tracks through the mountain fastnesses .
2 2 Two or more words normally associating with each other and having much the same meaning as the nominal phrase , eg the very poor , a summit meeting .
3 Besides , I did n't fancy going to the Chapel and having all the family looking down their noses at me .
4 Whichever bone it was , it was a crotch in shape ; that is , a forked bone like a wish-bone , and having precisely the same shape as the frog — the horny elastic pad — in a horse 's hoof .
5 The government of the Virgin Islands was accused of mismanagement and having almost no control over the activities of DC personnel working on the project .
6 But having well a regional , a regional visits every once every how many weeks .
7 It has been reported that the addition of minute amounts of phosphatidylcholines normalised the short nucleation time of bile from patients with cholesterol gall stones while having only a minimal effect on the cholesterol saturation index .
8 Sisters were categorised by Orton ( 1980 ) as having either a high or a low student orientation .
9 They constructed a circular model , where both parties in a conversation are shown as having virtually the same functions .
10 In many of the predator assemblages described here , the mandibles of small mammal prey species are frequently intact , here defined as having all the bone of the mandibular body and ramus present for each half mandible , but lacking some or all of the teeth ( Fig. 3.12 ) .
11 The young wine , which had been delivered two days earlier from the cellars of a certain Monsieur Chapautier had been identified by Dr Davies , an admirer of fine wine and port from an early age , as having all the signs of a vintage which would mature to perfection by the 1993/94 conference season .
12 This kind of group can be thought of as having only a minor role within counselling .
13 Schoolboys reveal themselves as having only a thin veneer of ‘ civilization ’ which , once the constraints of authority are removed , disappears , laying bare their ‘ true nature ’ which is violent , domineering , and competitive , resulting in the survival of the fittest in a most literal sense .
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