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

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1 At the same time , his specific treatment of the social situation of popular music , by proceeding , in his usual way , ‘ through the extremes ’ , does have the negative virtue of exaggerating real trends ; the tendential strategy of the music industry in the period of ‘ mass culture ’ has nowhere been more incisively presented .
2 Because we have so many cameras I can have for the editing a great many possibilities ; and if we have filmed the music properly in the first place we can already have created some very important effects just with one shot — the violins may have the principal melody with an important counter-melody or harmonic detail in the violas , so we might shoot the passage in such a way that we have the violin bows in the foreground , the conductor , and the violas clearly focused as the third element in the shot .
3 The renamed Tropical Forestry Action Programme would have the reformed objective of " conservation and sustainable development of forestry resources in the interests of the country concerned and the global community " .
4 The plan is to be renamed the Tropical Forestry Action Programme and will have the reformed objective of " conservation and sustainable development of forestry sources in the interests of the country concerned and the global community " .
5 Whilst it does not have the theological aims of the NVALA , the NFoL/CARE or the OCU , it still appears to have developed in response or opposition to many of the same social trends highlighted by those other groups .
6 The production does n't have the imagistic verve of Adrian Noble 's great Royal Exchange version in l980 but it is beautifully acted and rivets our attention on the fierce particularity of Webster 's language .
7 His fascination leads him to an agency which administers mental implants , so that he can have the vicarious experience of interplanetary travel injected into his memory .
8 Such horses often have a very long coat of hair , a ‘ malnutrition coat ’ , which the horse grows against cold , as it does not have the normal layer of fat under its skin to protect it .
9 Bill says their odd couple relationship works because they do n't have the normal pressures of married life .
10 On the contrary , they would have the normal reason for disregarding any belief or information on that score : that the law is the law and must be followed , no matter how unpopular it might be in the present climate of political opinion .
11 The vote was not legally binding , but was thought to put strong pressure on the Council of Ministers , which would have the final decision on the basis of qualified majority voting .
12 He was also worried that social workers on the care management team would have the final say on choosing nursing care .
13 However , they do not have the final say on tat is included or on what is rejected .
14 According to the proposals , the new presidency would have the final say on a range of important decisions relating to economic policy and government appointments .
15 Dowty 's 17,000 shareholders will have the final say on 1st June .
16 The leaders would have the final say in the winter of discontent .
17 However Parliament at Westminster , as the sovereign authority in the UK , must have the final say in what arrangements are made for governing Northern Ireland . "
18 If , upon arrival of the goods , the consignee does not have the required bill of lading in his possession , he often obtains the carrier 's release of the goods by tendering an acceptable letter of indemnity .
19 I have in my possession a new drug which will have the required effect upon him . ’
20 After our return from France we felt that we still did not have the complete story of that operation , and so we went to the Public Records Office at Kew to look up the records of 22 Squadron over that period .
21 Although the domestic authorities do not have the immediate problem of defending a fixed exchange rate under the present system , the external situation has still had an overriding influence on most countries ' domestic policies , as was indicated by UK experience during most of the 1970s and the late 1980s .
22 In its place we shall have the serious problem of gearing for London .
23 This did not originally have the plunging action of today 's routers , and was really only a fixed motor with a collet to take a limited number of cutters .
24 He was writing ‘ in anticipation of the day when I go to join the revered Karl Marx and other revolutionary elders ’ : ‘ Our country will have the singular honour of being a small nation whose heroic struggle has defeated two big imperialists , the French and the Americans . ’
25 Trade unions do not have the exclusive right to such face to face information sessions with employees
26 Barristers will no longer have the exclusive right of audience before higher courts ; any lawyer possessing an ‘ advocacy certificate ’ will be able to appear .
27 Hall agreed to this , with the proviso that Clarke should not have the exclusive right of sale at the exhibition .
28 He was unlike Tait or Rayleigh or J. J. Thomson in that he did not have the useful start in scientific life of a Cambridge degree , or indeed any degree .
29 I might still have the odd tin of some oval golden tablets , big as gooseberries , which we used to give them for worms .
30 And you did have the odd team of people like Don and Tina who o obviously had n't done things before .
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