Example sentences of "has [to-vb] with [art] [adj] " in BNC.

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1 Ms Amanda Taylor , 29 , who took up the Lib Dem banner , also has to contend with an Official Liberal Party candidate , Mr Erbie Murat .
2 In light-water reactors ( including PWRs ) the concrete shell of the reactor building needs to withstand a pressure of five bars , whereas a fast breeder has to cope with a mere 40 millibars , according to an Electricite de France engineer .
3 Now she 's on powerful drugs to suppress the problem … and she only has to cope with a one or two fits each day .
4 Man also has to cope with a great range of natural disasters , like earthquakes , hurricanes and volcanoes — other topics studied in Geography .
5 On the next level are classrooms for conductor-trainees , offices and a sitting/buffet area , which has to cope with an international mix of families , visitors , students , staff and conductors .
6 ‘ At one level — and leaving out the executive stress — this woman has to cope with an enormous sense of personal threat , ’ he said .
7 I feel far mo , less sympathy and far less identification with her than I perhaps do with a male worker who has to cope with the same kind of exploitation that I do , day in , day out .
8 Then he has to cope with the alarming vocal displays of the old males , designed to put him off his game .
9 This may be the case literally when a French speaker has to communicate with a non-French speaker but , even within a common language , usage varies enormously .
10 If he is less than successful he may find that he has to work with an unco-operative discharger .
11 The Dee Hall is larger than the Royal Oak , and the management has to grapple with the organizational problems involved in a change of ownership while simultaneously deciding how to develop an adjoining site .
12 It also has to struggle with the social and economic consequences of the recession vested on the country by central government and of course it is expected this year to meet the costs of what is an unwanted and will be a costly and unsatisfactory reorganisation of local government .
13 We never receive the impression that Dickens has to struggle with the English language to express his meaning .
14 As cholesterol is insoluble in water , it has to combine with a soluble protein in order to form a soluble lipoprotein .
15 British Telecom currently has to comply with the featherbedding European directive for essentially historical reasons , both because of its past as a state-owned company , and as a result of its previous status as a dominant carrier , which arguably it still is .
16 These are not , however , the same kind of truth ; for the first holds for all time and every place , whereas the second has to do with a specific event which as a matter of fact took place at a particular point in history .
17 The second reason has to do with a simple fact of communication .
18 As height is genetically determined , it is difficult to see what it has to do with an acquired goal of achievement , except where parents or teachers convince tall children that they are achievers .
19 ( This undoubtedly has to do with the resultative nature of the passive . )
20 The first has to do with the individual animal 's past history .
21 Metaphor is not just a matter of semantic features — it has to do with the above large-scale schemas .
22 A third reason has to do with the non-experimental character of most social research .
23 ‘ Still another difficulty has to do with the specific words the counsellor uses .
24 The desire for natural religion reflected an awareness that religious faith has to do with the inner life of human beings , that it connects up with profound needs , drives and searchings at the core of our existence .
25 It has to do with the perfect fusion of many things : the refinement and effortless muscularity of the six-cylinder and V8 engines ; the harmonious balance of the springing and damping ; the flawless construction ; the quality of interior appointments ; the strength of the body shell ; the grace of the body line .
26 There is another potential drawback ; it has to do with the fluent child 's love of ( or abuse of ) debate .
27 This principle in Hinduism is called ‘ Pancha Bhootas ’ and has to do with the five states of creative substances and their relationship to the five sensory faculties .
28 Part of the reason they do so is cultural and has to do with the elective affinity of their habituses with postmodern culture .
29 The second kind has to do with the conceptual coherence of the theory that the empirical investigation is designed to support .
30 The story of temperature measurement has to do with the experimental determination of the quantitative laws of expansion as well as a greater theoretical understanding of heat and thermo- dynamics .
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