Example sentences of "[noun] have a [noun] day " in BNC.

  Next page
No Sentence
1 The Redpath brothers had a field day , sharing five of the six tries and a contribution to Melrose now and in the future could hold the vital key to unlock even more championship trophies .
2 The Scots have a rest day today , and those who did not play against Stellenbosch will turn out against Bellville tomorrow .
3 It was a nuisance having a working day split in two , but on the whole the job suited her quite well .
4 Carl Barrett had a field day with his wind-assisted corners ; one found the net direct and two others produced goals for Paul Balfour and Seymour .
5 Film buffs have a field day in Birmingham , with both mainstream cinemas , and avant garde , minority interest and foreign films at the Triangle Cinema and the Midlands Arts Centre in Edgbaston .
6 It was the wildest party Britain had seen , and the media had a field day with a revelling of nude and painted bodies , cavorting to fine music under a dense cloud of cannabis smoke and punctuated by the occasional screams of an acid drop gone wrong .
7 The newspapers had a field day , as the case caught the imagination of the country .
8 And soon there would be a shortage of clothing and would n't those shop girls have a field day , then !
9 Back to the last , when Chester City had a field day .
10 It is little wonder that fundamentalist sects have a field day welcoming in disillusioned people who have been put off Christianity by forms of Anglicanism which offer so little and demand nothing .
11 " The club men have a field day , " said one of their clients in Coventry .
12 In the years between Swann and Burnage the media had in any case had a field day .
13 Economic on movement perhaps , but Le Tissier had a field day and earned high praise from Branfoot .
14 The Italian press had a field day : Niki should be replaced .
15 The press had a field day !
16 Thus , during 1984 , investigative journalism had a field day .
17 The rest of the stock market had a see-saw day .
18 It was easy to make fun of , and it was no wonder that Conservative Central Office had a field day , distributing a compilation of green policy statements , including the unrealistic ones on replacing the EC with a ‘ loose federation of ecological countries ’ and disengaging Britain from the international money market .
  Next page