Example sentences of "have [adv] [verb] [noun sg] to " in BNC.

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1 The affluent clients of the smartest shops of Hong Kong , Paris , New York , London or Tokyo respond to the same qualities in ivory as those which attracted Palaeolithic mammoth hunters up to thirty thousand years ago and have continued to beguile all who have since had access to the material .
2 Attention should be drawn to Foresman 's comment that the US Geological Survey ( USGS ) ( at the EROS Data Centre ) have successfully linked ARC/INFO to a model of groundwater flow ( Foresman 1986 : 260 ) .
3 For example in Germany , works councils have long had access to resources to investigate design of work systems under the Quality of Working Life .
4 You have long considered music to be a therapeutic force in modern society .
5 Some of the claims have been on the basis of debatable information , and all have been highly selective and have only drawn attention to the adverse elements of research whilst ignoring much encouraging , positive information .
6 Erm I have already referred sir to the investigations which are proceeding with regard to the ability to erm , as it were , encourage er this er amphibian to go to other ponds , and I would again call your attention to the state of the knowledge we have at the present time , which is that that is not possible .
7 If you have already given thought to your self-assessment and how well your qualifications match the job you will make a better showing on the form than if you have not bothered .
8 Genetic counselling is basically giving advice to parents , including those who have already given birth to a mentally handicapped child , of risks of having a first or second child with mental handicap .
9 Trips have already taken place to Edinburgh Castle , Luss on Loch Lomond and up the Clyde Valley .
10 First , the one I have already drawn attention to — love is infused in us by revealing love .
11 I have already drawn attention to the power there is in weakness and it is often the case that God is able to take ordinary weak things of this world and make them powerful for him .
12 I have already drawn attention to the appalling contrast between the plaintiff 's young life as it was before the accident and her life as it is now .
13 But the biggest drawback is that there are very few places left in the world where the malaria parasites ( species of Plasmodium ) have not developed resistance to them .
14 I have not given way to Opposition Members —
15 The remaining techniques have not given rise to general-purpose instruments but have proved useful in particular experiments .
16 For the clinical and educational professions ( and the lay notions which derive their values from them ) , their very practice makes it clear what fact it is that you ‘ come to terms ’ with : you have not given birth to a member of the human species as we define it , and to which we allocate certain rights and social roles , but to an object of pathology — a ‘ monster ’ , to use a technical term employed in medical anatomy .
17 For the parent , the same phrase means the inverse : I have not given birth to the monster which my upbringing and socialisation led me to believe I 'd had , but to a normal member of the human species as I now define it .
18 Only passing accounts of his life and work have appeared in the literature , and while brief references have been made to Nicholson 's excellence as a chemist , these have not done justice to his achievements , or set them against the London localities where they occurred .
19 Are there examples of successful theories which have not done justice to any of the espoused criteria ?
20 I dined out on that one for quite a while , but have not had occasion to be offered cream coronets of late .
21 This kind of ability is both envied and disparaged by many Continental musicians , and it can not be doubted that professional English singers often perform music which they have not had time to ‘ learn ’ in any sense of the term that a European singer would accept .
22 In 1986 , however , only 31% of all newly qualified Ph D graduates took up university employment ( Anderson 2 ) , and the boom period for academic jobs was around 1965 , when 53% of all such researchers found employment in universities , so that it may be that the majority of successful Ph D researchers over the period have not had access to those facilities which would have helped them to publish .
23 In 1986 , however , only 31% of all newly qualified Ph D graduates took up university employment ( Anderson ) , and the boom period for academic jobs was around 1965 , when 53% of all such researchers found employment in universities , so that it may be that the majority of successful Ph D researchers over the period have not had access to those facilities which would have helped them to publish .
24 Like David , I have not got access to Satellite TV so I am also stuck with teletext and very poor coverage from the BBC .
25 Other recent changes have generally restricted access to unemployment benefit ( Atkinson and Micklewright , 1989 ) and , in particular , they have denied benefit to women who had been eligible to at least some benefit in their own right .
26 Colonies have always given scope to adventurers from the metropolis who have enjoyed irresponsible power over the natives , whether as administrators , police officials , soldiers , traders , or settlers ( even if these were of the peasant class ) .
27 ‘ The people of the Cévennes have always given refuge to the oppressed . ’
28 Primary elections have always person-alized politics to an excessive degree , but television has made the situation much worse .
29 Julia Patton and A. J. Sambrook have both given consideration to ‘ Snaith Marsh .
30 DuPlessis and Lawson have both shown damage to gastric columnar epithelium by exposure to duodenal contents .
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