Example sentences of "[noun pl] as they have " in BNC.

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1 It does not seem to work well with some 16 bit computers as they have quite complex keyboard electronics , and rather indirect means of reading the keys .
2 When he does so , I hope that he will ensure that he legislates to ensure that Labour can not operate delaying tactics as they have in Wolverhampton .
3 I think it 's a fatal mistake to have dropped the kerbs as they have .
4 That removes the Government 's mask which they have worn over the past few months as they have tried to pursue the idea of cheap gas .
5 It also turns out that the ratio of proportions is rather cumbersome to handle when dealing with many variables at once , and no-one has yet proposed a way of decomposing it into component effects as they have with d s and with measures based on odds .
6 For example , some governments would probably not have spent as much on telecommunications as they have done without the stimulus of a foreign-dominated export sector that produces hard-currency earnings , and the expectation that such facilities , however expensive , would attract even more companies .
7 For Sumner , law embodies the appearance of reality produced by social relations , so that , for example , an employment contract appears as a consensual contract between equals ( a point also made by Hunt ) , but it also embodies those appearances as they have been seen and interpreted by classes and groups who make laws .
8 Social workers must first diagnose the problems and then help with such practical aids as they have at their immediate disposal .
9 On that basis , we have asked the Health and Safety Executive and the Health and Safety Commission to consider what contribution they can make to the overall citizens charter initiative to ensure that companies or individuals — whichever are concerned — have the same rights with regard to those organisations as they have with regard to other government and quasi-governmental bodies .
10 From this perspective the nature of modern democratic regimes , and the setbacks and limitations which they experience , are intimately connected with the class structure and the relations between classes as they have developed both in capitalist and in what I shall call ( for the moment ) post-capitalist societies .
11 ‘ And in a perverse way this is something which may be helpful because they are now beginning to appreciate more clearly the fear that has existed within the Protestant community for the past 20 years as they have been killed at random by the IRA , ’ he added .
12 Such skeletal structures as they have are called spicules or sclerites , and are tiny calcareous particles which are present in large numbers .
13 Obviously most severely disabled persons are likely to have financial problems as they have either a limited earning capacity or even none at all .
14 My hon. Friend has been a staunch ally in trying to resolve difficulties as they have arisen for my constituents .
15 In my opinion , and for the reasons I have tried to formulate , such a refusal would not be consonant with relevant legal principles as they have developed and have been applied in the last 50 years .
16 The majority of students have not felt obliged to take out loans as they have not thought it necessary .
17 Agents are n't keen on multiple agency agreements as they have no guarantee of commission , despite incurring the marketing costs .
18 Schools involved in the scheme have been kept well informed of developments as they have occurred , aided by the Cambridgeshire termly newspaper LFM News .
19 There are two broad sets of problems to be considered : first , the political impact of the working-class movement in capitalist societies as they have developed since the late nineteenth century ; and second , the political systems that emerged from revolutions carried out under the banner of Marxism as ‘ proletarian revolutions ’ , in Russia , China and other countries .
20 Apart from working on its ambitious equality programme , the Race Relations Committee has dealt with other issues as they have arisen throughout the year .
21 ( It will also have been a waste if the outcome is only to soften up British buyers for Japanese companies to rush in and sell us microcomputers as they have previously sold us domestic electronic equipment . )
22 The consequences of an inflexible retirement age fell particularly hard on women as they have a lower pension age .
23 The historians also fail us — in this country , at least — for they have not studied the topography of towns as they have in Germany and France .
24 The non-metropolitan counties , or ‘ shire ’ counties as they have come to be called , are substantial local authorities in terms of both area and population ( see Map 3.1 and Table 3.2 ) .
25 It will allow doctors to perform twice as many operations as they have done in the past .
26 It is the responsibility of centres offering HCIMA programmes of study to develop and have printed , for distribution to students , Programme Regulations relating to the operation and administration of such sections of the programmes as they have authority to offer .
27 As with the free ion , the inter-electronic effects depend on a number of complicated integrals ; these can be expressed in terms of Racah parameters , but B and C do not have the same values as they have for the free ion .
28 How many more years shall we have to wait before we have as up and running and as efficient a marketing system for British products as they have in France , Holland and Denmark ?
29 Sea levels have risen and fallen with the coming and going of the ice ages as they have everywhere else .
30 The Realist approach , he remarks , gets its name from precisely this point : that it deals with human nature as it is and not as it ought to be , and with historical events as they have occurred , not as they should have occurred .
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