Example sentences of "will have [art] bearing " in BNC.

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1 Fabre , obviously delighted with Lion Cavern 's winning reappearance , commented : ‘ The ground will have a bearing on our decision .
2 The teenager 's own responsibleness — and that of their friends — will have a bearing on your decision .
3 That will have a bearing on my future . ’
4 Before examining these in detail , there is one fundamental consideration to be looked at which will have a bearing on all managerial activity ; management style and attitudes .
5 It might be necessary to witness a rehearsal before an assessment of the overall impact of the play can be made , and if the purpose of the performance is so that it can be publicly reproduced on a different occasion , the circumstances in which that publication will take place will have a bearing on the offensive character of the artefact in question .
6 4.1 The way in which clients are received throughout the Department will have a bearing on how they subsequently act .
7 Any further development of the field will have a bearing on the field life of Thistle .
8 Members will be conscious of the fact that results for the Bank in Britain were substantially better than those predicted earlier and , of course , this will have a bearing on the outcome of discussions .
9 The level of penetration of IT applications in educational practice and the level of familiarity with IT amongst teachers will have a bearing on the uptake of IT in the wider context of post-school experience .
10 Social processes operate , " selectivity " in Lieberson 's terms , such that volunteers , draftees or those never serving , will differ from one another on factors that will have a bearing on life chances , hence income , later on .
11 The group relief position between the various members of the vendor group , including Target , needs to be considered by both Newco and the vendor , because it will have a bearing on : ( a ) what the parties to the buy-out agree should be paid by Target for group relief to be surrendered to it by other members of the vendor group or , conversely , what payment Target should receive for losses and other group relief items which are available for surrender from Target to other members of the vendor group ; ( b ) whether adjustments need to be made to inter-company loan accounts ; for example if it has been assumed that in the accounting period of Target in which the buy-out occurs it will achieve a certain level of profitability which will enable it to claim group relief from other group companies and that those other companies will accordingly be able to write off £x of inter-company debt due to Target , the fact that Target leaves the vendor group , say , half-way through that accounting period , will prima facie reduce the amount of group relief it can claim to half of £x ; furthermore Newco may not be willing to pay as much as half of £x out of Target unless this represents a discount on the amount of corporation tax Target would otherwise have to pay on such profits ; additionally , the notional disposals which Target makes under s179 TCGA when it leaves the group may either increase its profits ( if a gain arises ) or decrease them ( if a loss arises ) ; ( c ) what the parties agree in terms of indemnity cover for Newco for tax charges crystallising in Target ; for example , the vendor goup may agree to surrender sufficient group relief to Target free of charge to preclude any charge to corporation tax arising from the operation of s179 when Target leaves the group .
12 This year 's form will have a bearing on all future claims .
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