Example sentences of "[adj] [noun] [conj] [adv] have " in BNC.

  Next page
No Sentence
1 This is one of the best Basque villages , twistier than others in its layout , and the home of the red pepper , a fiery vegetable that now has an annual festival in Espelette in the autumn .
2 Erm and then if you go onto drawing graphs from equations okay so skip that bit and just have a look at page sixty eight .
3 Such an approach , while making the double taxation of profits all too likely , in theory does away with fake transfer pricing within multinational groups and therefore has some merit ( see page 83 ) .
4 The new amendment relates to the bill 's effect on the legislation covering elections to the European Parliament and technically has the same effect as the Labour amendment 27 , which the Government belatedly said would not prevent ratification .
5 But fluoride 's toughening is not so much help to the uneven biting surfaces ; they are at risk even when people practice good oral hygiene and regularly have their teeth professionally cleaned .
6 The point estimate for the study by Barclay et al is close to the combined estimate ; that by Vijayaraghavan showed least effect but also had the lowest mortality in the control group , and its confidence intervals include the overall community study reduction of 30% .
7 It is also possible that surface dust is mobilized by electrical forces : indeed , such forces are of great importance to the minority of scientists who believe that very little lava if any has flowed from the lunar interior .
8 No prior drug therapy had that effect and neither had any previous course of ECT .
9 City equalised through Peter Costello after 49 minutes but then had Graham Bressington dismissed for a scything tackle on Tony Griffiths .
10 Riding the Boy is Adrian Maguire who had two winners this afternoon and now has a lead of over thirty in the race for champion jockey …
11 I speak with them for forty minutes and generally have my socks charmed from my feet , the spring put in my step and all semblance of a chill factor taken from this typical October evening .
12 A few minutes after Amiss had gone Sunil cleared up the fragments of cheese and biscuits , deposited them neatly in the waste-paper basket , picked up a couple of books and some blank paper and descended to the next storey .
13 It was always disappointing to sight the Land Rover and anticipate being in camp in a few minutes and then have an hour to walk .
14 Answer guide : If the business owns the shop it also owes this money and therefore has a liability , in this case it is a long term liability .
15 Few homes as yet had freezers , but shops did .
16 The use of English was thus significantly more restricted in the first generation than in the second generation , who had generally attended British schools and often had a native-like command of British English .
17 ‘ Clothes make man ’ said the German proverb , and no age was more aware of it than one in which social mobility could actually place numerous people into the historically novel situation of playing new ( and superior ) social roles and therefore having to wear the appropriate costumes .
18 For several years the number of people out of work for 12 months or more had been steadily dropping , reaching a low in the North-East ( the North excluding Cumbria ) of 36,000 in October 1990 .
19 The number of people waiting 12 months or more had also fallen from 367 in December to 183 last month .
20 I got on my bike and went back to the house a bit recklessly , shooting through puddles on the path and taking the Jump — a bit on the path where there 's a long downhill on a dune and then a short uphill where it 's easy to leave the ground — at a good forty kilometres per hour , landing with a muddy thump that nearly had me in the whin bushes and left me with a very sore bum , making me want to keep opening my mouth with the feeling of it .
21 St Jude 's Square lay before her , level and familiar , flanked by its old taverns and the graceful iron railings of St Jude 's churchyard where Luke still often waited for her ; the square crowded and ebullient today with the stalls for the Friday market , with traders and dealers and pedlars of fancy braids and buttons , fans , feathers , bright little birds in cages , beads , sequins , second-hand dresses that could be unpicked and made over , second-hand bonnets that could be remodelled , old belts that sometimes had decent buckles , sugar sticks the colour of rubies and emeralds that would be a treat for Liam .
22 The sovereign 's power to debase the currency has passed to the commercial banks and so has the seigniorage which once accrued to the state .
23 Peter has with CCG for the past 2 years and also has 20 years experience in servicing ‘ blue chip ’ clients and business development .
24 No British government in the past forty years and more has been elected with even a bare majority of the votes cast .
25 The hotel also has a great variety of light meals/snacks and also has its own TV and video — so there 'll never be a dull moment !
26 Celtic should be encouraged by the form of Paul McStay , who orchestrated their dominance in this match and clearly has not lost his zest for the game after a long winter injury .
27 I 'm a poor old dear but just have to get on with it , ’ said the 32-year-old British No 1 .
28 Our study helps to resolve the apparent paradox : females take a year longer to reach sexual maturity and so have longer to grow .
29 A communicative support system sounds a rather arid notion and so it is important to reiterate that it is embedded in a social relationship and only has meaning in such a flesh and blood context .
30 Shotwell ( 1955 ) attempted to distinguish between bones from different sources by devising an index of completeness of preservation , by which species represented by most complete remains must have been transported shorter distances and therefore have come from communities close by , while species with less well preserved remains must have come from more distant communities .
  Next page