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

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1 The Services Development Unit at ACE has as part of its primary mission the development of a centralised database concerning the services and activities provided for , and of particular interest to older people , their relatives and carers .
2 In this paper , I want to look at one kind of way in which some feminists have tried to conceptualise what it is for a woman to be ‘ autonomous ’ , and at the implications this has for ways of thinking about the human self .
3 We will also seek further opportunities for the private sector to contribute , as it has for example with the Channel Tunnel , the Queen Elizabeth II bridge at Dartford , the second Severn Bridge and the Birmingham Northern Ring Road .
4 I understand the emotional pull that devolution has for people in Scotland , but I hope that every Scot will examine very carefully what it would mean in practice for Scotland and for the rest of the United Kingdom .
5 The anger among Asian teenagers which Geeta and I noticed in 1974 has of course since then led to Asian boys hitting back .
6 In fact , thanks largely to Sir Robin Day — ‘ the Grand Inquisitor ’ , as he calls himself in the title of his new book — the impression that the average viewer probably has of politics on television is that it is predominantly adversarial .
7 We can all get a chuckle over that the fact that Microsoft is going to refuse to renew the cross-licence it has with IBM for Windows and NT after it expires next year .
8 Peter has with CCG for the past 2 years and also has 20 years experience in servicing ‘ blue chip ’ clients and business development .
9 For example , in his verbal sparring which he has with Bajazeth before their battle he tells him that ‘ every common soldier of my army shall smile to see thy miserable state ’ .
10 The Government 's intention to revoke a Planning and Compensation bill amendment which encourages protection of Britain 's hedgerows met has with opposition from Conservative MPs .
11 Third , the Registrar 's certificate will be given the same effect as regards further particulars as it has with respect to the creation of a charge .
12 Socio-economic status is one such property where we can classify individuals as having " more " or " less " status but not be able to say how much more or how much less status one person has with respect to another .
13 London-based controller developer Pacific Semiconductor ( Europe ) Ltd has introduced its new Laserboost board that it says can radically improve the performance of Canon Inc SX , RX and TX-based laser printers like the LaserJet II and III , Brother HL8E and Canon LBP8II for a fraction of the cost of a new machine : the board takes only 15 minutes to install and costs just £380 ; it features Hewlett-Packard Co PCL 5 printer language , eight scalable fonts , a 20MHz 68020 processor , proprietary ASICs and Direct Memory Access through the parallel port ; it also has from 2Mb of memory , one independent and two parallel ports , offering HP7475A plotter emulation .
14 The nature and degree of insanity which will afford a defence to a criminal charge has from time to time been a matter of considerable discussion .
15 For my part I am not condemning , I am illustrating the fact that the Christian symbiosis between nature and humankind , expressed so well in the Bible , has from time to time been replaced by man 's domination of nature with disastrous consequences for both .
16 In common with all insurance companies , Legal & General has from time to time to adjust its premium terms to take into account the changing nature and frequency of household insurance claims .
17 Though small in size and numbers , Border has from time to time been good enough to thump the New Zealand All-Blacks and the British Lions at rugby , and to produce such cricketers as Peter Kirsten , Hylton Ackerman , Ken McEwan and the brothers Greig .
18 His nasogastric tube has from time to time to be removed or re-inserted .
19 The firm has from time to time various secondees both at the Listing Groups of the Stock Exchange and with the Panel .
20 The search for training which fits this description in the management of education is hindered in two ways : it has long been an area for tension between theorists and practitioners and it has from time to time been exposed to management models from fields where practice and purpose are very different from those of education .
21 A colour version , the 68030-based LX1200 , has from 6Mb to 37Mb RAM , 1,080 x 1,024 resolution and costs $3,000 .
22 The latter fact notwithstanding , the literature is replete with confirmation of the powerful influence that mother 's education has upon levels of infant and , particularly , early childhood mortality in developing and developed countries alike .
23 I assure my hon. Friend that we look forward to receiving any further written representations that he has in addition to the cogent case that he has put before the House today .
24 ENGLAND made their expected landfall in the 1990 World Cup yesterday , leaving Scotland and the Republic of Ireland to drift towards whatever fate the draw has in store for them in Rome tomorrow .
25 ENGLAND made their expected landfall in the 1990 World Cup yesterday , leaving Scotland and the Republic of Ireland to drift towards whatever fate the draw has in store for them in Rome tomorrow .
26 With Kevin Costner planning a biopic of Michael Collins and gay black British film director Isaac Julien set to make a movie about Roger Casement one can only speculate at what else the film world has in store for Ireland 's heroes .
27 ‘ Who knows what the future has in store for us ?
28 And the Holy Spirit is given as a firstfruit of the harvest God has in store for us ( Rom. 8:23 ) ;
29 ‘ So you have n't seen what the day has in store for you ?
30 Old Mother Thames will be keeping mum about what she has in store for them … until the big day in April .
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