Example sentences of "[adv] [pron] has [adv] " in BNC.

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1 Apparently she has never once run into personal danger , and perhaps the clarity of her intention , and the careful planning of her route each night , have helped in this respect .
2 ‘ But perhaps she has yet to realise what she 's letting herself in for , using her name to get you installed here , allowing you to share their transport …
3 So she has absolutely no idea how to cope with young children .
4 He remarks that in America especially there has always been a strong cross-racial homosexual attraction less restrained by social barriers than its heterosexual counterpart ; ‘ the very furtiveness and outlaw status of the gayworld has led to its greater integration across colour lines ’ .
5 So there has always been a need to attach labels to audio media , whether written descriptions on sheets of paper or in some other form .
6 the nature of the illness or injury , how long it has already continued and your prospects for recovery ;
7 The precise location of the boundaries between the middle class and the classes above and below it has also been the subject of dispute .
8 A Both will establish separate homes , but constitutionally it has never mattered whether the Prince and Princess of Wales were happy and together or not .
9 Perhaps it has just got eczema , for crying out loud . ’
10 The external appearance might be considered typically Japanese — matt black folded steel case , drum feet , extruded black anodized aluminium front panel — yet one pauses : perhaps it has rather less in the way of lights , button and switches than usual .
11 Perhaps it has really been so much hot air .
12 Or perhaps he has intentionally made the ‘ syntax error ’ in order to alert people to the danger of their nuclear inventions .
13 Perhaps he has even kissed you !
14 Perhaps he has also been unduly obsessed by the style of Cézanne and by recollections of the static art of the Egyptians .
15 Perhaps he has just waited to see what was emerging and then stepped in quickly to take the initiative and carry forward the proposal which he has sensed is about to emerge .
16 ‘ I know he has had his moments in the past , but perhaps he has never been at a club big enough to cope with his particular character .
17 Perhaps he has only met one type of female and does n't realise that a woman can value time alone and is n't forever fretting over her partner 's choice of underwear .
18 So he has already made his will , yes , leaving all already to his future wife .
19 Last year , a couple of their events were not fully covered by sponsorship income and it is doubtful whether Mark McCormack will want to add to the £2million or so he has already poured in .
20 IN THE recent report of the Church of England 's Doctrine Commission , We Believe in God , the doctrine of divine impassibility , that God can not suffer , is described as ‘ the most venerable theological position ’ and so it has generally been when Christians have endeavoured to think or speak about the nature of their God .
21 So it has only got three legs ?
22 And so it has now set its ‘ education and outreach ’ department ‘ to encourage young people from across Britain to use their music and song to tell their stories ’ .
23 The kind of variation revealed by occasional spellings as primary evidence does not always fit comfortably into the standard historical linguistic mould , and so it has often seemed convenient to ignore it or explain it away , sometimes on the grounds that variability of the kind apparently attested is ‘ impossible ’ .
24 In doing so it has often tended to neglect crucial distinctions between the nature of language and the nature of images .
25 * Palfrey 's full name is Horatio Benedict de Palfrey , but , as he explains earlier , ‘ you may forget the first two ( names ) immediately , and somehow nobody has ever remembered the ‘ de ’ at all . ’
26 Nevertheless it has long been recognised that , whatever may be the theoretical position , there are far-reaching limitations in principle on the exercise of that jurisdiction .
27 Thus it has actually been held that murder can be an ‘ accident . ’
28 ‘ it tends to be supported by those who wish to constrain the redistributive potential of state welfare and thus it has always been part of a broader conservative view of the aetiology of social problems and their correct solutions ’ ( Macnicol , 1988 , p. 316 ) .
29 Thus it has always been recognised , and rightly so , that there is a large place in the laws of war for other sources of law : custom , general principles of law , judicial decisions , and the writings of highly-qualified legal experts .
30 Yet this is exactly what has recently been proposed by Professor David de Rosier and his co-workers at Brandeis University , in Massachusetts , ( Journal of Molecular Biology .
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