Example sentences of "[conj] [noun pl] [verb] have [noun] " in BNC.

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1 We saw that there is some evidence that , where women do have command over financial resources in a way normally associated with men , they share in financial support in families in a way rather similar to men .
2 The answer to this dreadful conundrum , for both Donnison and Fairbairns , is to elevate the central issue of women 's dependants and to increase benefits for them such that , where women do have dependants — be they very young or very old — women also have a considerable income .
3 that ducks do have eggs it 's possible they could of been there but they were n't .
4 Realising these advantages assumes that DHAs do have bargaining leverage over providers , that they do have choices and that they are given the freedom to make them .
5 Much of the legislation for completion of the single market has been adopted with a significant proportion already in force ; other legislation , such as in the air transport sector , is only transitional , so that businesses affected have time to adapt to the changing environment .
6 You get the impression that teachers do have stereotypes about black kids , about them not being too bright at academic subjects but good at sports .
7 One of the myths Eleanor would speak against was the idea that socialists wanted to have women in common , and the men who made these accusations , she said , were the owners of the means of production anyway .
8 The ways in which events and acts come to have meanings attached to them which serve as the bases for action or inaction by regulatory agencies , and the negotiating tactics employed in securing compliance are central topics dealt with in Part III .
9 When it was too late and Nails had had time to cool down , he realised he should have asked for Mr Bean or even Biddy or Nutty 's dad to be contacted .
10 Most experienced social workers and therapists have had clients who , confessedly or otherwise , have been sexually attracted towards and/or have fallen in love with them .
11 Anchors , ropes , engines and propellers seem to have lives of their own , too often intertwined .
12 Indeed the need to know about the earlier and later stages of a child 's education becomes imperative when schools have to plan the next stage of learning on the basis of achievement so far , when teachers have to evaluate and — if appropriate — change their own teaching , when parents have to be told in detail how their children are progressing and when LEAs , parents and governors have to have information which allows the performance of the school as a whole to be evaluated .
13 Typically the survey asks if respondents have had contact with family/friends/neighbours on a scale ranging from daily to never .
14 This means that the Keynesian model may be more relevant in the short run ( in which wages and prices do not have time to adjust to demand and supply changes ) , but that the neo-classical model may be more relevant in the long run ( in which wages and prices do have time to adjust ) .
15 But parents throughout Northern Ireland have been campaigning for the new test to be revamped or at least postponed until pupils have had time to get to grips with the new format .
16 In 1975–90 in Scotland 25% of children had grommets reinserted within four years of their first operation , and children have had grommets inserted up to 14 times ( data obtained from Scottish morbidity records , Information and Statistics Division , Common Services Agency , Edinburgh ) .
17 If choreographers have had training in classical dance , they already have a large vocabulary of movement on which to call .
18 NORPLANT was licensed in Britain in May but it 's launch has been delayed until now so that doctors and nurses have had time to be properly trained in patient counselling and implant techniques …
19 While it was true that the experience of dependants ' benefits demonstrated to the Ministry of Labour that ‘ not in a few cases they enabled respectable and industrious men and women to avoid having recourse to the Poor Law ’ ( Ministry of Labour , 1924 , p. 10 ) , the restoration and continuation of dependants ' allowances and the establishment of uniform minimum scales of Poor Law outdoor relief in January 1922 owed much to the activities of the National Unemployed Workers ' Movement , which organised protests na-tionally as well as against local Boards of Guardians .
20 The fundamental problem facing the Soviet Union is that the discipline which once held the centrally planned system together , however imperfectly , has collapsed before markets have had time to develop .
21 When viewers have had time to develop their own theories about the scene , they are strongly motivated when it comes to listening to the soundtrack to check whether or not they were right .
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