Example sentences of "[adj] [noun sg] [vb mod] have [art] " in BNC.
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1 | By 1994 the principal is confident that every student on a full-time course will have the chance to visit a foreign country as part of their studies . |
2 | Whether classed as amateur or professional , full-time sportspeople must have a good head for business and develop basic marketing and PR skills . |
3 | There are a large number of situations in which it is expected that professional judgement will have a considerable influence upon the implementation process . |
4 | A rule with hierarchical action will have a form : |
5 | In contrast 50 per cent of women with acute gonorrhoea will have no symptoms at all . |
6 | In the Criminal Justice Act 1991 , it was made clear that whatever penalty is imposed must be commensurate with the seriousness of the offence , but it remains to be seen whether this attempt to structure sentencing discretion by adopting an offence-based tariff will have the desired effect . |
7 | Anyone wanting to make a successful career as a professional musician must have an eternal sense of optimism tinged with gilt-edged charm and a business sense which would put Richard Branson in the shade . |
8 | ‘ Conservative Party political dogma should have no place in determining our vital public transport system . ’ |
9 | The Bill provides that a Scottish Parliament would have the right to vary upwards or downwards from the United Kingdom 's established level of personal income tax . |
10 | The Scottish Parliament will have a vital role in building the competitive strength of the Scottish economy . |
11 | At stake are not only the interests of potential motorway users and of persons whose land might be compulsorily acquired to provide a route for the motorway ; also involved are the inhabitants of villages and towns which will be relieved of through-traffic by the motorway ; British Rail may have an interest in inhibiting the development of alternative means for the transport of goods ; improved transport and communications facilities provided by the motorway may benefit some businesses at the expense of others ; and motorways have , of course , serious environmental effects which lovers of the countryside and people who live near the proposed route will be anxious to avoid . |
12 | In this way the homosexual writer is granted a dubious measure of liberal pity ( ‘ if only he had n't lived in such a repressive world ’ ) while at the same time the heterosexual critic distances the threatening possibility that a homosexual writer might have a great many insights into the codes , mechanisms and ideologies of heterosexuality itself . |
13 | As a result of the second limb of what is now s681(1) ( a ) being passed into law , the Inland Revenue could assess all the income under Part XV of the Taxes Act ; with regard to the income of £2,000 derived from the American shares the Inland Revenue may have an option whether to charge the same under Case V of Schedule D or if , for instance , s672 is the relevant provision under which Part XV is applied , then under Case VI of Schedule D ( s679 ) . |
14 | Ernie Walker , the retiring secretary of the SFA , said yesterday that Scottish football could have a two-month winter shut-down scheduled for as early as next season . |
15 | Ernie Walker , the retiring secretary of the SFA , said yesterday that Scottish football could have a two-month winter shut-down scheduled for as early as next season . |
16 | The LEA English adviser should have a co-ordinating role to ensure liaison between feeder primary schools and their secondary schools . |
17 | To survive in a rational era , the irrational institution must have a function , and must appeal to the population . |
18 | Similarly , the announcement on 8 March 1962 of the composition of the National Directorate of the ORI , which revealed that the Communist old guard would have the upper hand , was countered three weeks later by the denunciation of Anibal Escalante for ’ sectarianism' , a measure which forced the Soviet Union to take a stand . |
19 | And the old bar will have a new taste . |
20 | Notice that one frame in free fall can have a very different velocity and acceleration from another such frame . |
21 | Poulantzas , on the other hand , characteristically refuses to debate on the empirical ground of ‘ bourgeois sociology ’ and denies that any degree of social mobility could have a material bearing on the Marxist analysis of the class structure . |
22 | I thought the old place might have a ghost , you know . |
23 | High grade can have a shorter history , systemic symptoms , abnormal exploratory and laboratory findings , gastric tumour masses , stage IV disease , and a worse outcome . |
24 | History , indeed , tends to show that public intervention can have the effect of reinforcing rather than curbing market excesses . |
25 | Your faithful housekeeper can have the day off . |
26 | If any of these poor beggars die of cold old Starling will have a hard time digging a hole for them . ’ |
27 | Any proposals to tackle both the assumptions behind these recent policies and the long entrenched age discrimination within social security will have an uphill task . |
28 | Sir Archibald Sinclair , the Secretary of State for Air , thought there should be only one company , and Lord Beaverbrook stated that free enterprise should have the widest possible scope in the operation of the companies . |
29 | However , another group of people have equally strongly held views , and for that reason it is not as easy as my hon. Friend would have the House believe to introduce legislation that would command total respect in the House . |
30 | If there were such a mechanism , if a cloud resembling a weasel or a camel could give rise to a lineage of other clouds of roughly the same shape , cumulative selection would have the opportunity to get going . |