Example sentences of "have [noun] [to-vb] [adj] [noun] " in BNC.

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1 In the drive for greater efficiency , Manweb is in discussion with Welsh Water about sharing depot and other facilities and has plans to develop new business initiatives , including a fee-earning energy consultancy .
2 It also has contracts to maintain nuclear plants such as the one at Hinkley Point .
3 Come the next general he 'll be able to judge the value of that crass statement himself as he and the rest of his cabinet are replaced by a Party that has policies to develop real training and employment opportunities for the people of and for the country , and that will be a Labour cabinet and a Labour Government .
4 HUGHES NETWORK SYSTEMS HAS CONTRACT TO BUILD DIGITAL NETWORK IN CHENGDU
5 ‘ The club has aspirations to achieve national league status for the town within the next three to five years .
6 Although the local authority has powers to adopt private roads , it may be reluctant to apply them as the cost of the road construction will fall on the landowners proportionate to their road frontage .
7 It would also explain why the Attorney-General , as representative of both government and people , always has standing to protect public rights ( although in practice the Attorney never does sue where the respondent is a department of central government ) .
8 Small manufacturer has mower to offer big units
9 The Family Division of the High Court has jurisdiction to hear public law cases which have been transferred up the court system or issued at High Court level .
10 The EEC has laws to stop harmful organisms in plants coming into the community .
11 It has time to dissolve minute quantities of minerals which can give it definite characteristics such as hardness or taste .
12 If an aid is granted without informing the Commission or before the Commission has had sufficient time to examine the aid , the Court has recently held that the Commission has power to take interim measures ordering the member states concerned to suspend the aid and provide the Commission with all relevant information .
13 The Court of Appeal has power to receive fresh evidence only on special grounds .
14 1.65 By s50 of the County Courts Act 1984 and CCR Ord 13 , r12 , the County Court has power to order interim payments in cases where the plaintiff claims more than £500 .
15 However , the appointment of a receiver must not be equated with that of a liquidator : ( i ) where a receiver is appointed the company need not go into liquidation and if it does the same person who acted as receiver will normally not be appointed liquidator ; ( ii ) liquidation is a class action designed to protect the interests of the unsecured creditors whereas , as we shall see , receivership is designed to protect the interests of the security holders who appointed the receiver and it is for this reason that a receiver can be appointed even where the company is in liquidation ; ( iii ) liquidation terminates the trading power of the company whereas this is not the case with receivership ; ( iv ) a liquidator has power to disclaim onerous property , something not possible in the case of receivership ; ( v ) a liquidator in a compulsory winding up is an officer of the court whereas this is not the case with a receiver unless appointed by the court ; ( vi ) lastly , it is easier to obtain recognition of liquidation as opposed to receivership in proceedings in foreign courts .
16 Under section 25 of the Civil Jurisdiction and Judgments Act 1982 , the High Court has power to grant interim relief where proceedings have been or are to be commenced in another Contracting State to the Brussels Convention or in another part of the United Kingdom , or where there are or will be any other proceedings within the scope of the 1968 Convention even if that Convention does not directly apply .
17 It held that it was open to any aggrieved party to challenge before the European Court a decision by the Commission ordering production of documents which a party considers are privileged , and the Court has power to grant interim measures to prevent disclosure of those documents to the Commission until the dispute on privilege is resolved .
18 ‘ No ; the police came to see me before I had had time to make other arrangements .
19 The function of this argument was to suggest that , although the local authority may have had power to institute civil proceedings in its own name under section 222 , it had no duty to do so under section 71(1) .
20 ( iv ) They should have opportunities to write personal letters to real , known recipients and should be shown how to set them out .
21 " I love foliage and I think you have to rely a lot on that in small gardens because you do n't have room to leave dormant areas where nothing is happening for a long period , " she says .
22 As his diocese included the Isle of Wright , The Rev. Pearce would often have occasion to hold signed conversations with Queen Victoria who was acquainted with some deaf people near her favourite retreat at Osborne .
23 Conversely , there are times when readers do have rights to affect written discourse .
24 The extraction activities began at Druridge bay many years ago and my right hon. Friend does not have powers to initiate environmental assessments in such circumstances .
25 The agency will also have powers to charge private companies for " permits to pollute " , and to carry out such environmental monitoring work as is required by law .
26 It was possible but not inevitable that the EMF , which would have powers to impose monetary discipline on lax national treasuries , would evolve into a fully-fledged European central bank .
27 The Agency will have powers to trace absent parents through Inland Revenue records and to enforce payments through measures such as attachments of earnings .
28 Sales and purchasing directors and managers will probably have authority to make commercial contracts in most cases , whilst warehouse and delivery staff will generally not have authority to agree contracts or vary terms , but no hard and fast rule can be laid down .
29 To a considerable extent these views supported those of the Bar Council in seeking to retain the monopoly of barristers in the superior courts , in rejecting multi-disciplinary partnerships , and in objecting to the Lord Chancellor having power to make final decisions on the training , conduct and rights of audience of advocates .
30 The High Court in England and Wales or Northern Ireland shall have power to grant interim relief where —
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