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

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1 Processing signs has clear right hemisphere involvement ( Lubert , 1975 ; McKeever et al. , 1976 ; Manning et al. , 1977 ; Poizner and Lane , 1978 ; Poizner , Battison and Lane , 1979 ) .
2 Each of these new technologies has clear offensive uses .
3 N. laydekeri fulgens has deep crimson flowers which are really eye catching .
4 No one else in the tragedies has as many soliloquies as Iago does ( not even Hamlet ) .
5 Refitting the original sealed beam units has now improved matters !
6 But the decline in fungi has more serious implications for ancient woodlands , which , according to Philip Mason of the Institute of Terrestrial Ecology , " may not survive without fungi .
7 Thus Moore 's methodology points inevitably to his main ethical conclusion , which is that nothing , or at least very little , is to any great degree good except for cases of personal affection and the enjoyment of beautiful objects and that everything in life which does not come under these heads has barely any value apart from whatever it may have as a means of promoting these great goods .
8 Any reduction in North American grain yields has potentially severe consequences for the world grain market in terms of food shortages , especially for Third World nations with poor purchasing power .
9 Uneven allocation will thus lead to some subjects having relatively short notation at the expense of others with relatively long notation .
10 The contigs of the cosmid and YAC libraries found by the two methods were essentially identical except for minor differences in order neighbouring probes having very similar or identical hybridisation patterns and which could be easily swapped .
11 Nicol led a token Liverpool protest that it had not crossed the line , but 12 minutes later Palace 's fans had far greater cause to howl their disapproval .
12 All staff had been invited to submit book lists through their heads of department , but often these lists had too much textbook-type material , and there was inevitable overlap between lists .
13 This research showed that one group of bronzes had very similar lead isotope ratios to the Benue Rift ores , while others had isotope ratios which , although different to the ores , could result from Benue Rift material being mixed with another ( and geologically younger ) source .
14 With regular centre-forward Kelvin Simple taking over duties in goal , the City Reserves had only four players left on the park .
15 On the top floor the bedrooms had pretty sloping ceilings and dormer windows peering out under eyelid gables .
16 Never in the history of racing has a new stables had so many horses … and so many winners … the assistant trainer we know all about …
17 Split firsts would mean that fewer rejected candidates had really good firsts .
18 In part there was the problem of Babel — in different countries or different regions , plants and animals had quite different names ; and in part it was a problem of taxonomy .
19 He explained that their house down under the railway by the Bridge of Three Eyes had only one room , but his own eyes shone as he described the delights of a gypsy supper .
20 Financially , the slave traders had rather more reason to take care of the people they were carrying than the transporters of convicts or of indentured labourers did ; all of these groups were being taken over as a speculative venture on which the shipper got no return unless he delivered live bodies , but the slave traders had already paid out cash to purchase their slaves .
21 Three of yesterday 's heads had n't enough money so were not supplied .
22 The Scots , Irish and Jews had so much in common .
23 cars had very narrow fare tables .
24 By Spring 1944 some branches had nearly 10,000 members , and many had ova 5,000 .
25 Relatively speaking , says Bakker , dinosaurs had quite long shanks , but not as long as modern-day runners .
26 Progress on Cambodia appeared to be minimal , not least , according to observers , because the superpowers had far less influence in south-east Asia than in Afghanistan .
27 Because normal subjects had virtually identical values of active and total caeruloplasmin , we estimate that Wilson 's disease is caused by loss of oxidase activity rather than abnormal synthesis of caeruloplasmin .
28 Non-insulin dependent diabetic subjects had significantly lower β function than the non-diabetic subjects : 69% ( 48%–83% ) v 97% ( 86%–120% ) , p<0.001 .
29 These subjects had comparatively low positive titres in 1978 and may have been false positives .
30 Danzig 's northern and western districts had as high as 60–100 per cent Polish population , while south of the city the numbers fell to between 10 and 15 per cent .
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