Example sentences of "[noun sg] have [adj] [noun pl] " in BNC.

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1 Their extra wide tyres cushion you perfectly over the roughest of roads and each bike has easy-to-use gears .
2 And it reckons there is very little standing in its way — according to Parker , its four major competitors have nothing to rival the new product — Dun & Bradstreet Software Corp has incompatible products ; SAP AG is strong in Germany and other continental countries but not in the UK ; Walker Interactive Systems Inc offers purely mainframe software ; and Computer Associates International Inc has a poor reputation for financial packages .
3 Trehane has new camellias bred from the indoor reticulata species with very large flowers .
4 Craig Gwladys — Next to Penscynor Wildlife Park , this area of woodland has waymarked footpaths and picnic areas with spectacular views of the Dulais an Neath Valleys .
5 Male has white tips to outer tail feathers and three white spots on outer wing quills .
6 This aspect of the story has shocking implications as a representative of what might appear to be the random and unjust way by which salvation may be achieved — although St Peter always wins .
7 Such a change of direction has major implications for the way services are delivered and for staff roles .
8 The squat cupola has fan-shaped windows , and the all-seeing eye in the centre of its ceiling suggests a certain Masonic influence .
9 may occur earlier when sufferer has regular contacts with family/friends ; lives in a rural community or is in sheltered housing .
10 Determined belief in the capacity for self control results in pride that the sufferer has special standards and abilities that others lack .
11 A change in crop mix , perhaps also in crop planting technology and field preparation has strong implications for soil conservation , but the additional inputs required , particularly of labour , put strains on the reciprocal labour arrangements .
12 But driver has dodgy implications if you 're a copper .
13 Once a scientist has universal laws and theories at his disposal , it is possible for him to derive from them various consequences that serve as explanations and predictions .
14 The term ‘ bureaucratic bourgeoisie ’ to describe this state elite has certain problems , and used strictly should refer to managers of state-owned enterprises .
15 Combe Sydenham country park has beautiful walks and tasty trout for sale whilst Stogursey boasts a moated ruined castle and Norman church .
16 This change has big implications for health planners and for those caring for people with AIDS .
17 This fiction has various names : ‘ private eye fiction ’ , ‘ hardboiled fiction ’ which is a way of describing its style , and erm I have been interested in this for some time , partly trying to assess the reasons why such fiction occurred in America as a complete breakaway from the old kind of detective fiction which we all know about , the country house murder , why erm the figure of the private detective becomes so important in this kind of fiction between the wars , and what the relationship of this sort of fiction is to not merely other kinds of American fiction during that period but to more abiding American themes , particularly erm themes of individualism and toughness .
18 A gene-dosage effect of this kind has important consequences for the treatment of people carrying germ-line mutations in the p53 gene , such as those affected by the Li-Fraumeni syndrome .
19 The campaign which aims to prevent the capture of the seals claims that the dolphinarium has inadequate facilities .
20 Solid-model CAD has interesting properties .
21 If Quaid 's role seems contrived and the film betrays signs of forced editing in the abrupt , jerky resolution of an expansive but slackly focused narrative , COME SEE THE PARADISE has notable compensations : convincing performances from an unknown cast ( some of whom passed their childhood in the camps ) , a sharp sense of the sometimes bizarre and humorous manifestations of cultural miscegenation and a detailed evocation of period and locale .
22 The strictness of the defence has unfortunate consequences for some controversial publications : distributors are prone to equate political radicalism with a propensity to libel , and are thus provided with a ready-made legal excuse for a decision not to stock them .
23 When the heart has great depths , no surface storms can affect its clarity .
24 I should think they and the audience had a whale of a time or , in the rather more sober words of the two authors , ‘ the use of drama as a vehicle for science at the primary level has exciting possibilities that warrant further exploration . ’
25 The bit has various clefts cut out and would have served quite an intricate lever lock .
26 Thus collectivism has historical roots in religious or intellectual ideals , and in communal social practices .
27 In winter , skin has other problems to contend with — dry cold is extremely dehydrating and skin can become very dry indeed with central heating and lack of humidity .
28 under the data collection provisions , Article 11 , the data user has additional obligations with regard to the information that the data subject must be informed of , such as potential third party recipients of such data ;
29 The plain fact is that the feeble PC beep , usually allied to a tiny ( and tinny ) speaker is the laughing stock of the computer world — almost every other type of computer has sound capabilities that make the PC more to be pitied than laughed at .
30 But we always do have such a choice and hence no sentence has observational consequences all its own .
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