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

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1 Where organisations have a research need Henley works closely with the client to define and plan the project .
2 Some machine-code assemblers or monitors have a facility for high-speed copying of memory data from one location to another .
3 But then , do the French , Spanish or Italians have a word for it ?
4 Where relatives have an expectation of ultimate benefit from any property or capital , the situation becomes even more complex .
5 ‘ Importance is attached to the principle that a shareholder should be able to protect his proportion of the total equity by having the opportunity to subscribe for any new issue for cash of equity capital or securities having an equity element . ’
6 If you or a group of colleagues or friends have a fundraising idea call 0891 767400 , that 's 0891 767400 .
7 One of the windows of opportunity in Spain is in telecommunications , where EDS has an agreement in principle with Telefonica de Espana SA , the state-controlled operator , to provide ‘ substantial systems integration services in the billing area , ’ says Ribas .
8 Two workshops there considered the CCAUK 's case for ‘ pro rata to instalments ’ , and the point was well taken , especially where debtors had a mixture of short and long-term debt and/or weekly and monthly instalments .
9 For information which was on the file , there were very different approaches to letting parents or children have a look .
10 From this it followed , among other things , that molecules had a shape in three-dimensional space , and the brilliant German chemist Kekule ( 1829–96 ) , in the very Victorian situation of a passenger sitting on top of a London bus in 1865 , imagined the first of the complex structural molecular models , the famous benzene ring of six carbon atoms to each of which a hydrogen atom was attached .
11 Furthermore , absence of pain during cutting ( see below ) raises the possibility that endorphins have a role in the phenomenon .
12 It did , however , provide that the Agency , through investigation , could help to ensure that employers promoted equality of opportunity in employment but it did not provide that employers had a duty themselves to promote equality of opportunity in employment .
13 Offences committed by groups may well occasion greater fear than offences committed by individuals , and it may also be true that groups have a tendency to do things which individuals might not do : there is a group bravado , a group pressure , which may lead to excesses .
14 To say , in the abstract , that birds have a right to fly seems to me rather foolish if it be taken as saying more than that most birds fly naturally .
15 This is reinforced by Handy 's view that schools have a multiplicity of purposes and these are not discriminated between or prioritised , nor do they include any reference to the management of adults .
16 But taking the fact into account that schools have a history and a texture , the manager 's armoury of awareness has to be constantly reviewed and expanded .
17 However , it is also the case that schools have a lot in common .
18 There is , however , no reason to suppose that animals have a concept of genetic relationship .
19 I shall also argue that crises have a material basis , which relates to the periodic replacement and expansion of fixed capital .
20 It would be absurd if , following the Hayes and Garvin criticism of DCF , companies were to drop it and then assume that funds had a zero cost .
21 Antagonism at this receptor can prevent and even abolish these changes , suggesting that antagonists have a place in preventing and treating this pathological pain .
22 GIVEN that the most decisive factor in the Lincoln Handicap has traditionally been the draw — made the previous day — it seems odd that trainers have a fetish for ‘ laying a horse out ’ for it months in advance .
23 The first is traditionalism , by which is meant that Conservatives have an attachment to established customs and institutions , and , as a corollary , a hostility to ‘ sudden , precipitate and revolutionary change ’ .
24 In conclusion , Mr Angus pointed out that trusts had a life after the next dividend declaration .
25 Next , quoting the Confederation of British Industries , the chapter rehearses the view that companies have a duty to take account of the interest of employees and should develop effective systems of employee participation .
26 The law , he said , ‘ should reinforce the principle that parents have a responsibility for the actions of their children . ’
27 More generally the evidence of the study of middle-class kinship by Firth , Hubert and Forge indicates that most people acknowledge that parents have a right to make demands upon their adult children , and that most children will do their best to meet those demands ( Firth , Hubert and Forge , 1970 , pp. 406–7 ) .
28 This is not to deny with Brown ( 1980 ) that geomorphologists have a part to play in elucidating the history of the shape of the earth , particularly in the light of the revolution that the theory of plate tectonics brought to the understanding of continental distribution .
29 They noted that asylums had a tendency to provide employment on farms and in workshops for the most competent and socially organized patients and there were some remarkably successful asylum farming ventures ; for example , in the early twentieth century Cane Hill Hospital became famous for its herd of pedigree pigs .
30 But although long-nets have a number of uses the nets are exactly the same for each purpose .
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