Example sentences of "have something [to-vb] with [noun sg] " in BNC.

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No Sentence
1 It may have something to do with discount offers , advertised heavily in The Sun and in local papers — though the offer of £1 off tyres costing between £30 and £60 at one London depot seemed a little ungenerous .
2 It may have something to do with intelligence , but I am certain it has nothing to do with knowledge — I mean that there are people who have an instinctive yet perfect moral judgment , who can perform the most complex ethical calculations as Indian peasants can sometimes perform astounding mathematical feats in a matter of seconds .
3 Possibly it might have something to do with interoperability at the class library level or maybe a little something for OMG 's next RFT on services .
4 In support of the idea that ear differences in recall may have something to do with position in lateral space there is an intriguing but brief report in the literature that the magnitude of ear asymmetry can be modified by requiring subjects to wear prism lenses that displace the visual field to one side of the true position ( Goldstein and Lackner , 1974 ) .
5 The only editorial guideline was that the subject should have something to do with leisure software for home computers .
6 Anthony Sampson objected — rather too moderately , I felt — that this might all have something to do with politics .
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