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

  Next page
No Sentence
1 Secondly , migration from the cities has in net terms been removing the types of people that are least affected by increasing unemployment .
2 De Smith has adumbrated four different tests which the courts have at one time or another used .
3 Perhaps because of this the courts have in subsequent cases generally declined to follow Lord Macmillan 's view .
4 On her properties she usually thought only of leasehold for the most superior housing , as at Alderley Edge , where the houses had between one and five acres each .
5 They had not yet given their opinion to the present proposal — given outline permission by East Hampshire District council 's northern area planning sub-committee on March 24th — because the plans had at that stage only been submitted in outline .
6 Japan and Britain : An Aesthetic Dialogue 1850–1930 will be held at the Barbican Art Gallery and surveys the art of Japan and Britain , showing the influences that the cultures had on one another .
7 The conifers have at last eliminated water as a transport medium for their sexual processes .
8 If the animals had in any proper sense rights , we should no more be entitled to put them to death without a fair trial … than to torture them for our amusement .
9 Mr Henderson has had negotiations with the council and private enterprise to discuss the super-stadium project , but he promised : ‘ I want to retain Ayresome Park because I understand the sense of history , the relationship the fans have with Ayresome Park .
10 What the styles had in common was a number of letter forms .
11 I know of others who feel much the same — it 's called consensus politics , and it requires cooperation and a concentration on what the parties have in common rather than exaggerating their differences .
12 ‘ The boy and girl are with you , ’ the Trapper repeated like a man slow of thought , to whom the words had at last revealed their significance .
13 In our society the judges have in some aspects of their work a discretionary power to do justice so wide that they may be regarded as law-makers .
14 The rhynchosaurs had by that time became extinct .
15 With TV , especially in the major areas and London in particular , a very heavily sold market , the contractors have in good years been less willing to deal .
16 Usually , what all the ghosts have in common is a tragedy suffered during their life on earth , and they will reappear to a family descendant in the attempt to resolve what could not be resolved in life .
17 They are concerned with what is perceived to be ‘ right ’ for individual old people and their supporters and what degree of professional responsibility and organisational accountability the workers have for such people .
18 I mean , you all know about the image the cruiseliners have with wealthy widows and things like that .
19 Meanwhile , the conservationists have until 14 March to persuade Norway 's environment minister , Mrs Wenche Frogn-Sellag , to commute the sentence on Vegarshei 's lone wolf .
20 Against the $9.5 billion of deposit liabilities outstanding at the end of 1985 , the banks had at that time only about $1.5 billion of assets in the form of dinar credits .
21 These are ‘ assets ’ since they represent claims that the banks have on other people .
22 One thing all the armies had in common was a careful explanation of their presence , a specific mandate set out in such complex detail that officials of the Lebanese Foreign Ministry were sometimes still trying to decipher its true meaning when the army in question was retreating out of Lebanon .
23 ( 1 ) By using the cumulative Current Law Citator , which is published annually ; this can be brought up to date with the Statute Citator in Current Law Statutes — a table of the effect the statutes have on earlier legislation .
24 It was apparent as the light grew that the rocks which lay scattered among the trees had at one time been arranged in order .
25 What all the theories have in common is the fundamental assumption that criminals are different from non-criminals in that they have a more or less enduring disposition towards the commission of crime and that this disposition is explicable in terms of ‘ causes ’ .
26 All the items had in common was dust .
27 The subsequent dismemberment of Inca society showed the faint enthusiasm the Spaniards had for this opportunity , yet it was such an idea which had given the term ‘ mestizo ’ a dignity beyond its racist translations of ‘ half-breed ’ or ‘ half-caste ’ .
28 The toast to the Divisions has for some time been a ‘ musical geography tour ’ and this time people present were treated to an extra musical item being the toast to National Office , whereby gave an immaculate rendition of The Hippopotamus Song .
29 Secondly , what are the mother tongues of those who will be using the grammar to learn the language ? if the mother tongue is related to the target language , many features which the languages have in common will not need to be drilled .
30 Because of their bracing action the joints have to accurate
  Next page