Example sentences of "it has [adj] [noun sg] of " in BNC.

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1 It has net worth of £430 million and net debt of £325 million .
2 the organ is quite one of my most favourite instruments — it has that combination of depth , harmony , majesty and spirituality that can raise the soul , bring joy to the heart and let one cast aside the ephemeral tedia of everyday life .
3 Thus where the discretionary fund management arm of a conglomerate receives confidential information from the corporate finance arm about Company X , the fund management arm may be prevented from using the information of disclosing it if it has actual knowledge of the breach of confidence or possibly where it ought to have known of the breach .
4 It has full interlinking of languages and computing capabilities and can , for example , search for a chemical substance in one language and print out information covering hazards and remedial actions in another .
5 It can provide a precis only where the topic is something that it knows about , so that it has some sense of what conceptual relationships to expect in the story .
6 ‘ The fact that it has some kind of playful relationship with Birmingham is something with which readers of my novels can easily cope .
7 The gardener wo n't like it , but I 'll say it has some kind of disease — ’
8 MANY people believe that the Royal Navy is referred to as the Senior Service because it has some sort of superiority to the Army , but the term was not even heard before the 17th Century .
9 But goodness can choose to change its nature if it has true freedom of will .
10 DEC has found it has another piece of technology to throw on the COSE heap .
11 DEC has found it has another piece of technology to throw on the COSE heap .
12 Whether or not it has any prospect of success this court is in no position to determine , but while it remains alive we do not consider that the judgment of this court can be described as final within the meaning of rule 2 ( a ) .
13 A local authority that spends less on special educational needs does so either because it has less incidence of such needs or because it is in dereliction of its duties to pupils with those needs .
14 If it has less incidence of such needs , does it not follow that it should score highly in the narrow spectrum of examination results for the most able pupils ?
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