Example sentences of "[pron] [adv] has [verb] [noun] " in BNC.
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1 | The former 's designed for competition climbing , the latter a more robust version of the popular Black Master which now has improved racking . |
2 | Fortunately , she has saved a large deposit to put down on a flat so she only has to borrow £45,000 . |
3 | John Richards , a Bristol-based financial adviser , who often has to send checks to his clients in France , wrote three cheques for £140 and was shocked to be charged £27 on each cheque . |
4 | In the organization of enrolment it is the headteacher who principally has to make decisions along which governors are guided . |
5 | I have absolutely no conscience about taking this stuff from Ellis , who incidentally has shunted Plutarch off to a luxurious cattery and is still wrestling at getting the hairs out of the carpets . |
6 | You know she never has liked village people , and she 's always had rather a squashing way towards kids . |
7 | She too has heard rumours and fears greatly for their safety . |
8 | One only has to compare Scotland with England to see where the real problem lay . |
9 | Though one always has to treat figures such as these with caution , it does seem that the line-out project had considerable success both in terms of a reduction in operator dissatisfaction , reflected in lower turnover and a less rapid increase in absenteeism than other parts of the plant , and in terms of very substantial savings for management because of the increased flexibility of production it gave them . |
10 | One also has to take notice of the disadvantages to one 's life of too obsessive a preoccupation with questions of the precise limits of authority . |
11 | ‘ Everybody here has studied U2 's success and come up with a step by step guide of how to make it in the music business . |
12 | He obviously has heeded Ruskin 's advice not just to look at things but to ‘ watch ’ them . |
13 | It nevertheless has increased teacher 's accountability . |
14 | At present , however , it still has limited availability so that for some patients sigmoidoscopy and barium enema examination provide an alternative . |
15 | It was awful , he spoke so awkwardly , he always has to say things in a roundabout way , he always has to justify himself at the same time . |
16 | It also has taped seams . |
17 | It also has to assume responsibility for those children who lack parents or are not receiving proper care . |
18 | When Engles therefore tries to explain the passage from the second stage to the gens stage he has no theoretical tools to deal with this , and he lamely has to echo Morgan and to explain the passage in Darwinian terms dealing with natural selection . |
19 | So the Bank of England is in the situation that it usually wishes to sell government securities ; it invariably wishes to sustain long-run demand for such securities but it periodically has to take action which inflicts losses on the holders of such securities . |
20 | As a moral imperative , far from being incommensurable with his previous considerations , it merely adds others similar in kind ; he now has to see things from his parents ' viewpoint as well as his own , consider their health and resources , ask himself how much they have done to arouse his gratitude or his rancour , whether his staying would really do them any good , whether he can get on with them without quarrelling , and add all this to the information which he must assimilate before he lets the needle of his internal compass finally settle in the direction of Bali or of home . |
21 | ‘ I do n't feel anyone here has taken advantage of your grandmother , Matthew . |
22 | When Mansell 's lapped , he then has to lap Patrese . |
23 | Since she has pushed the decade for almost her entire career , one can only wonder what she 'll do now that everyone else has followed suit . |
24 | If everyone else has got boy or girl friends , so what ? |
25 | What then has made debt the single most pressing problem for CAB clients in the late 1980s ? |