Example sentences of "[vb -s] [det] [to-vb] with [noun sg] " in BNC.

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1 ‘ So what has that to do with love ? ’
2 ‘ But what has that to do with desire ? ’
3 In recent years people have found it increasingly difficult to accept the conventional doctrines of Christianity , but a visionary like Julian penetrates the cerebral crust of the religious experience , which has little to do with logic and reason , to reach its core .
4 This sliding-scale approach might still have relevance to the Post Office Act , on which that case turned , but it has little to do with obscenity as defined in the 1959 Act .
5 Clearly , group formation and aggression by contemporary human beings has little to do with hunting and survival .
6 Subjectivity is a daily pitfall but I seem to observe that being ‘ earthed ’ has little to do with intellect , class , fortune or even belief .
7 At least the up-to-date cost accountant has plenty of ammunition to fire at the chief executive who insists that accounting has little to do with strategy .
8 He is Turkish as well , but the common nationality of his workforce has little to do with solidarity and more to do with limiting the risk of being caught .
9 That ratio has little to do with stewardship , being concerned with indicating the success or failure of the business during the year .
10 ‘ Amazing , ’ you may say , ‘ but what has this to do with conveyancing ? ’
11 What has this to do with hearing ?
12 Therefore , I do n't think this has much to do with methodology .
13 If , as the Department of Health survey reveals , most Brits are monogamous , it has less to do with morality than the fact that they believe a sexual partner is someone who helps you change the duvet .
14 Seniority as we have seen has less to do with age per se than promotion either to a higher position or within a grade .
15 Instead , their contribution has more to do with co-ordination , management of collaboration and complexity , ensuring widespread input and engagement , and , finally , validating or ratifying the commitment of the firm to a course of action .
16 The whole effect is original and has more to do with whim and fantasy , rather than the philosophy and scholarship of the later periods of the Gothic Revival .
17 The second has more to do with society and can not be changed readily .
18 nothing to do with intentions has more to do with sort of intuition .
19 It has more to do with geography .
20 Fourthly , Realism accepts that political acts have moral significance , but only in a sense which relates to the interests of the political agent and which has more to do with prudence than with traditional ethics .
21 It gained terrific publicity , but it takes more than column inches to sell records , and I am sure that Elvis 's continuing success has more to do with talent .
22 ‘ The Bloody Sunday grant has more to do with vote catching in the Bogside and Creggan in May , ’ claimed Mr Adams .
23 On the basis of these figures , the issue of juvenile crime seems less to do with welfare dependency , and more to do with after-school child care .
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