Example sentences of "to have many " in BNC.

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1 Admittedly , RDS , unlike Carfax , was designed to have many functions for home as well as in-car listeners .
2 ‘ You used to have many admirers , ’ the mother changed .
3 He was to have many fine one-day knocks over the years and now he hit 88 ; only when he was ninth out was the match definitely lost , West Indies eventually winning by 36 runs .
4 They seemed to have many roles , in reproduction , in blood vessels , in certain enzyme systems , and in the activity of nerves .
5 You are bound to have many questions you would like to ask , as well as certain anxieties about which you would like your mind set at rest .
6 The animal was thought to have many tentacles and to spend most of its time sleeping .
7 ‘ From Arsenal 's point of view , it 's good to have many players to choose from but Anders can not be happy sitting on the bench or up in the stands .
8 The actual burden on most preparers will be rather less than may appear from the disclosure requirements of the FRED , given that it is unusual for a company to have many different kinds of capital instruments in issue and , therefore , in many cases few of the specific disclosures will apply .
9 Through our interpreter , Christine , he said , ‘ I used to have many more mementoes from my naval career , but the British ’ — he seemed to speak not of us but of some distant tribe — ‘ looted them . ’
10 However , at eight miles , the stretch between the M11 and the A12 is also the second-longest section on the M25 without a junction and so is statistically likely to have many delays .
11 A common denominator both of these critiques and of positivism and natural law theories , is that most of them speak about the law — even if this is seen to have many facets .
12 The engineering capability and traffic demands meant that an airfield was many years off — the float-equipped ‘ bush ’ aircraft was to have many years of sovereignty in Ontario .
13 Furthermore , although it is smaller , there is an area that corresponds to Broca 's area in the right hemisphere that does n't seem to have anything to do with speech but which seems to have many of the same connections .
14 To ask whether the meeting had caused this conversation is meaningless , for spontaneously arising conversations can be said to have many different causes .
15 Thus to be a " bastard " , or the child of what we would call a " broken home " , means simply to have many parents and to be part of a larger , stronger family .
16 People who consume fibre-rich diets do not tend to have many of the diseases associated with the developed countries .
17 One great advantage of this is that you can afford to have many more scenes in which your hero questions suspects or witnesses .
18 He 's got h he he 's likely to have many years yet is n't he , working for
19 Her father , Ralph Dent , a somewhat excitable fellow , was a pal of Uncle 's and they used to have many animated discussions about different aspects of religion .
20 While the breakdown of a corporate group into separate SBUs will improve diversification of the total group risk , if there is some interdependence between the SBUs it may be better to have many smaller interdependencies rather than a few large ones .
21 The Trust is a long-standing and valued connection at the Branch and it was a pleasure to have many local dignitaries in attendance at a splendidly friendly occasion .
22 Windows NT has been dubbed ‘ Windows Not There ’ by some cynics , because it has n't made an appearance on the marketplace yet , but when it arrives , it ought to have many of the better features of OS/2 version 2 , and , if my information is correct , be able to run programs for that environment as well as native Windows programs and DOS applications .
23 Which enables us to have many hundred erm Intel processors in a single hardware cabinet .
24 You 're being silly , she told herself ; a man as attractive as Luke Denner would be bound to have many women in his life , any number of girlfriends ; had n't she schooled herself into thinking this at least a hundred times — ever since that very first meeting , ever since he had dragged her unceremoniously into that small , chaste bedroom , ever since he had made love to her ?
25 The Hon Secretary gave a resume of the events held so far and also said that he was pleased to have many requests for information and membership from a wide area of the country .
26 At that time the party seemed to have many of the characteristics of a party which did not expect to win elections : it had changed its leadership only a few weeks before the general election was called , Lansbury having resigned and been replaced by Attlee on a temporary basis ; and it suffered from a good deal of internal factionalism , and found its major policy demand — collective security through the League of Nations — ‘ scooped ’ by Stanley Baldwin , the Prime Minister .
27 All these cathedrals were intended to have many towers surmounted by spires .
28 On the face of it , the market appears to have many of the features of a contestable market , that is , one where competitive conditions are maintained regardless of the market structure , due to the threat of new entry .
29 Speed came on for White and did n't seem to have many problems although that 's prob- ably because he did n't touch the ball much .
30 The same Oak Tree pub today does n't seem to have many more companions .
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