Example sentences of "as have [art] [adj] [noun] " in BNC.

  Next page
No Sentence
1 The previous Secretary of State — the right hon. Member for Bath ( Mr. Patten ) , now chairman of the Conservative party — had promised two years ago that he would have a look at SSAs ; that promise , however , came to nothing , as has every other Government promise relating to local administration .
2 A history of the collection and building of the Dresden Gallery has been published on the occasion of the reopening by E.A. Seeman Verlag , as has a complete catalogue of the works on show ( Heinrich Magirius and Harald Marx Gemäldegalerie Dresden , Die Sammlung , Das Gebäude , DM58 , and Uta Neidhardt , Angelo Walther , Harald Marx Gemäldegalerie Dresden Alte Meister , Katalog der Ausgestellten Werke , DM35 ) .
3 ‘ Decoupage ’ giftware , a Victorian-inspired design embodying the rich heritage of Mason 's , also received lots of attention from buyers as has a new tableware pattern , ‘ Spring Blossom ’ .
4 The content and implications of this document have been very widely analysed and debated as has the Tanzanian reaction to it , but a few short passages need perhaps to be quoted yet again if only to underline the very fundamental challenges it poses for curriculum planners .
5 The p&l account for 1990/91 and the balance sheet at 30 June 1991 have been restated to reflect these changes , as has the five-year record .
6 Geoff Nutkins ' fine work has been featured in the pages of FlyPast before , as has the excellent Museum he helps to run .
7 And according to physicist Tony Roth the Principle could well be true because many earlier broad cosmological theories have paved the way for later testable discoveries , as has the Copernican Principle , and even the Principle of Beauty which bore great fruit in the theory of electroweak interaction , which recently united the electromagnetic and weak nuclear forces .
8 It also seemed obvious that the universe had a unique history , yet since the discovery of quantum mechanics , we have had to consider the universe as having every possible history .
9 The defending solicitor tried to fault her on identification but she described the car as having a metallic paint job , wide wheels and a number of triangular stickers in the rear window ; she also thought that she could remember a couple of fluffy dice hanging from the rear-view mirror , and she gave the first three letters of the registration number .
10 She suggests that this was perhaps because women have traditionally been seen as having a passive relation to language which is similar to that of a simultaneous interpreter who translates the ideas of others but does not produce any of her own ( 32 ) .
11 ‘ where two or more persons are jointly entitled to a deposit … each of them shall be treated as having a separate deposit of an amount produced by dividing the amount of the deposit to which they are jointly entitled by the number of persons who are so entitled .
12 The wording here ( ‘ is treated as having a separate deposit ’ ) is different from subsection ( 3 ) ( ‘ treated as entitled to the deposit ’ ) , but in my view the intended effect is clear and is the same in both cases .
13 Harvey also sees general practitioners as having a key role in the information strategy for community care .
14 Britain in the 1940s and 1950s saw itself as having a major power ( primarily military ) space programme .
15 When Symphony was originally launched in July 1984 it was the first integrated business software package and the fact that it comprised a spreadsheet , word processing , database , graphics and communications led it to be acclaimed as having a good user interface and being a very complex and powerful program .
16 Mr Price said her statement described Mr Robson as having a swollen hand and scratches on his face .
17 There would probably be no need to transfer substantial assets of the business into the new company and the appropriate step might be to allocate part of the solicitors ' clientele to the company partner to establish it as having a regular practice .
18 The conference in 1968 reported by Rosenthal and Kety concluded that none of these factors had yet been convincingly established as having a causal role .
19 Even when the problem has been identified as having a legal perspective it is by no means certain that the client will conclude that a solicitor is the most appropriate source of advice .
20 ‘ This must therefore be considered as having a detrimental effect overall on the tourism market . ’
21 Disabled people have never been recognised as having a distinct identity .
22 Britain is widely regarded as having a political system which scores high on political institutionalization and low on personal leadership .
23 There 's nothing as exciting as having a new baby , I keep thinking , as I gaze into other mums ' prams at their new arrivals .
24 The Dreghorn barracks in Edinburgh has just undergone a major refurbishment programme as well as having a new wing built .
25 Mortensen described it as having a hooked tip and identified his specimens as A. palmeri , type locality : Key Biscayne , Florida because that species has a prominent hook on the second arm spine .
26 Hewlett-Packard 's PA-RISC , Slater held up as being among the fastest workstations shipping today , as having a rich architecture and as having a large primary cache in current implementations .
27 Furthermore , in valuing the shares transferred by the taxpayer , the company 's right to the income of the retained part had to be disregarded , since to regard the company as having a beneficial interest in the trust would be inconsistent with the beneficial ownership attributed to the participators .
28 Patients were classified into quartiles independently in respect of their energy intake and their physical activity and were then designated as having a low energy intake , a normal energy intake , or a high energy intake with respect to their physical activity .
29 Any of these must give it as having a certain structure .
30 Moreover this language and imagery is brought from the past into the present not just as any language and imagery , but as having a certain givenness .
  Next page