Example sentences of "have [noun pl] at [art] [noun sg] " in BNC.

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1 It gets very predictable from here , folks , as the grumpy Crane — a leading biologist who nevertheless has kittens at the sight of a snake — and dour old Campbell trade verbal punches and then simmering , sensual looks as they scamper about the jungle trying to rediscover the magic mix .
2 ‘ He has accounts at the bank . ’
3 Splitting the group up into small parties , each led by a parent who already has children at the school is a useful idea .
4 The 32-year old has had talks at the Racecourse with the Robins ' boss who said it was premature to talk about concluding a deal .
5 The 32-year old has had talks at the Racecourse with Wrexham manager Brian Flynn .
6 do they have patterns at the side ?
7 About 11 car dealers will have stands at the show , displaying a wide range of popular vehicles from Fords and Vauxhalls to Alfa Romeos and Mercedes .
8 Not only did I have loops at the edge , but seven or eight stitches actually leapt off the needles .
9 Our street was just a row of brick terrace house , and we did n't have gardens at the front .
10 Small wonder that people were star-struck by this ‘ deeply anti-democratic mind ’ ; or that even the most serious commentators , like William Safire , could not resist having cracks at the screenplay
11 S are you having problems at the moment with with the father ?
12 The three potential entrants to the EEC have been characterised by the European Commission as having economies at a stage of development midway between the developing and the industrialised countries .
13 ‘ Would they have records at the bookie 's to show you 'd been there , sir ? ’
14 Worst of all , some sadist of a landscape designer had slapped down Dancer 's stick-and-ball field right next to her house , so she not only had fairies at the bottom of her garden , but also a microcosm of Rutshire Polo Club .
15 She had hyphens at the tip of a honied tongue .
16 ‘ We knew Wednesday had problems at the back when long balls were played at them , so it came as no surprise when we scored on the break to make it 1–1 . ’
17 ‘ And what they 've got is a legacy from the old days , all those little terraced cottages which never had boundaries at the back .
18 The clinical features of the two groups as well as the subgroups in group A — that is , those who had calculi at the time sclerosing cholangitis was diagnosed and those who developed calculi after sclerosing cholangitis was diagnosed , are shown in Table I. Because of the similarities between the two subgroups in group A , they are hereafter referred to as one group .
19 The prosecution could open a can of worms , since Mr Shalabai who has denied any wrongdoing had connections at every level .
20 they had the stallions down there then you see , they had stallions at the stud .
21 If customers have accounts at the hotel , the system keeps a track of all expenditure and payments .
22 Animals which need to judge distance accurately have eyes at the front of their heads — like us .
23 ‘ We have medallists at every level , ’ said senior coach .
24 Both of them have workshops at the Abbey and are members of what they call a spiritual community there .
25 It is true that the market for top managers is more international than that for bus-drivers ; some of Britain 's best companies are run by Americans ( Glaxo 's Ernest Mario , for example ) and some of America 's best have Britons at the top ( J.P .
26 Whether overseas countries have pavilions at the show is surely not the point , what is important is the number of countries represented by the exhibits .
27 ‘ I have friends at the UFA film studios here in Berlin .
28 Plants which root at the bottom and have leaves at the base in the form of a rosette .
29 I have nerves at the start of every game but they soon disappear .
30 I have nerves at the start of every game but they soon disappear .
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