Example sentences of "[adj] [adv] have [pron] [det] " in BNC.

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1 By the fifteenth century the King of England was Lord of Ireland , though his new territory was separate enough to have its own parliament , whose power was reduced but not eliminated by Poyning 's Law of 1495 , which forbade it to pass any law that had not been approved in advance by the King and his council .
2 After starting in Ian 's hallway , Hunter Equipment Sales Limited now has its own freehold premises and a turnover in excess of £1m , selling specialised microscopes and other visual inspection equipment .
3 If you are lucky enough to have your own land , you have a head start on those of us who have to rent facilities : but are you making the most of it ?
4 But no one else is likely to be bothered by this , since the product is intended for the industrial site or building large enough to have its own substation .
5 UTV and Channel 4 now have their own separate sales arrangements in Dublin , and UTV is pushing itself as an all-Ireland TV medium .
6 Tala-Tala even had its own home-made harbour , a kind of inner lagoon in the outer lagoon , obviously a laboriously built , three-sided breakwater , in which I assumed that every stone must have been carried by hand or on rollers to afford protection for the boats it enclosed .
7 OTHER BITS THAT WERE N'T BIG ENOUGH TO HAVE THEIR OWN HEADINGS
8 Among the ‘ observers ’ , the Orthodox now had something more like their own teaching on Tradition than from any previous Western Council .
9 These are said to indicate two broad phases , one apparently following the line of the mid to late second-century north-south cross-street , which is especially prominent towards the western end of the defended enclosure , the other seemingly having its own distinctive alignment more akin to the line of the road running north from the main crossroads ; this is more obvious at the eastern end , and might therefore be earlier in origin .
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