Example sentences of "have [adv] [adj] [noun sg] [conj] " in BNC.

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1 This may not be a totally convincing critique of modern society , but it has clear modern relevance and is more than mere dislike .
2 Breeding male has conspicuously horizontal head and neck pattern of grey , black and white .
3 Her disadvantages are : I. That she has less technical skill than a man and is not so useful all round .
4 Now that the line has been fitted , the residuals tell us how actual chronic sickness rates differ from expectations formed on the basis of death rates ; the West Midlands region , for example , has less chronic sickness than you would expect from its death rate , but East Anglia has more .
5 Resolving the question of whether palaeocurrent flow in Torridonian Scotland was predominantly westerly or northerly is important to those interested in Scotland 's geological history , but has less external interest than the solution of the genetic code problem had for all biologists .
6 However , I have argued that this need not be so ; the classical perspective , in the basic form laid down by Beccaria , has much greater potential than has been exploited so far .
7 Of the available competition , Mravinsky ‘ live ’ in 1976 is pretty hard to beat , but the new version has much better sound and a comparably strong performance .
8 British and W European race of Lesser graellsii has much paler mantle than Great , with contrasting black wing-tips , but in Scandinavian race fuscus mantle often as dark as Great .
9 The dragonfly has so many ommatidia that it can see as well as some vertebrates .
10 He supports the view that under current law the Fed has so much leeway that it can honestly claim to be fulfilling the will of Congress no matter what policies it adopts .
11 He has so much experience and already we understand each other .
12 He has so much charisma and we should all be allowed to make one mistake in life . ’
13 ‘ It has so much atmosphere that one can almost see the medieval wool merchants going about their business .
14 It is to be hoped that the new management structure will prove to be a winning solution for the railway which has so much potential that it is a shame to witness the present agony .
15 ‘ Your friend has so much talent and she 's so … ’ he waved his hands as if trying to snatch words from the air , ‘ … she has this gift of firing one 's imagination without talking too much .
16 Toyota has so much cash that it could be mistaken for a mini-bank , not a carmaker .
17 There are a number of special requirements , including entering on the company 's register of members a statement that the company has only one member and giving the name and address of that sole member .
18 Conner has only one boat and a £7 million budget .
19 ( a ) a completed application signed by all the members and directors of the body ( in the case of a member which is a recognised body two directors of that body shall sign on its behalf save that where a body has only one director that director shall sign on its behalf ) in such form as the Council may from time to time prescribe , which application shall include ?
20 MOTORIST Steve Hopwood was turned down for a disabled parking pass — even though he has only one arm and one leg .
21 There was another coalfield on the west coast the Cumberland coalfield — but this had only 16 mines and now it has only one mine but several opencast workings .
22 It has only one aim and that is to please for a fee . ’
23 It has just one pickup and we 've talked about the idea of doing a version of it with a pickup in the bridge that you can mix in too .
24 has more technical expertise than those lower down ;
25 I plead guilty , partly , but in my defence I want to return to the point I signalled earlier , that a biographical approach has more political justification if the project being undertaken is one concerned with the cultural history of a marginalized group .
26 The food in some areas has more regional character than others but there are fine meals to be had if you ask around .
27 Economics , on this showing , has more practical use as ideology than as prescriptive science .
28 Even a modest PC has more raw power than an Amiga 600 or Atari ST and comes with hard , as well as floppy , disks , allowing programmers to include more levels and better graphics .
29 Like Mr Benn , Mrs Thatcher asserts national sovereignty and democratic accountability though in reality a determined prime minister with a pliant majority at Westminster has more unfettered power than in most Community countries .
30 it has more explanatory power because it involves direct observation and can hence lead to remedies .
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