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

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1 Brian Richards , vice president of UK preclinical R & D at Searle , which recently spent £15 million designing and building a genetic engineering pilot plant in High Wycombe , near London , argues that ‘ good manufacturing practice ’ may suffice for biotechnology factories — as it has for other fermentation industries such as the antibiotic industry .
2 The first step to getting Technopolis on the road is legislation to channel into the project what few funds the government has for regional development .
3 A media specialist , for instance , may well be a teacher who has through additional training and experience gained an extra competency ; a person with full professional qualifications and experience as a librarian may also ( as we saw ) be a recognized teacher , or have a diploma in educational technology .
4 That said , one of the best chances an unknown has of national music press exposure is in the live review section .
5 What impresses me in Messner is the combination he has of immense boldness and analytical power .
6 Western diplomats wonder why Mr Suharto , a man who has near royal status in Indonesia , should behave like an everyday politician who likes to see his name in print .
7 The Deaf Broadcasting Council ( DBC ) , a standing committee , which since 1980 has with considerable success campaigned for a better service for hearing-impaired people from the broadcasting media .
8 Nor would it be a significant gesture towards Britain 's 2.5 million Moslem inhabitants , as he suggests , because those Moslems mostly come from the Indian sub-continent , and the Khalili collection has about as much connection with their material culture as a collection of French medieval art has with Czech baroque art .
9 We may begin by considering the meaning which the notion of ‘ class ’ , and the ‘ working class'/ ‘ middle class ’ distinction in particular , has within popular ideology in Britain .
10 In each of these cases my method will be to discuss the effects the phenomenon has upon public liability companies , then to make comparison with the other forms in which we are interested .
11 It bears the meaning it has in ordinary language : Lawrence & Pomroy ( 1971 ) 57 Cr App R 64 .
12 This period of grace has in normal market conditions given the house owner adequate time in which to find a buyer .
13 The existence of other cases where this connection apparently can not be made , as pointed out by Jespersen , indicates however that this sense can not be taken as descriptive of the full potential for meaning which to has in contemporary English .
14 One can only use criminal law to test theories of law on the assumption that independently of the theory in question one has in criminal law a genuine instance of law .
15 MR BRYAN GOULD , 53 , the New Zealand-born contender for the Labour leadership , is the nearest the party still has in high office to a Socialist intellectual in the Anthony Crosland mould .
16 A complex interplay of industrial structure , patterns of social relations , efficacy of constituency organisation , trade union strength and national development determined the achievement of local parties , and hence an understanding of the political dimensions of working-class action over this period has in large measure to incorporate the locality .
17 This has in large measure been achieved under the SGSA 1982 ( see Chapter 5 ) .
18 Greenock 's lobby has in large brass letters the same motto that adorned the key IBM building in New York City in the thirties : ‘ World Peace Through World Trade . ’
19 but the second way in which section fourteen arises is this slightly more oblique way , erm , it 's , it 's not really the question of competition law it 's more a question of administrative law or constitutional law , erm whether it arises on the question er , your Lordship will have to decide , but , if , if it does then we believe that our case is extremely strong , because what one is saying here is , is section fourteen a block to an article eighty five action , erm does it make it either virtually impossible or something lesser excessively difficult , er and we say er that that 's one aspect and two can we show it 's discriminatory , well we say first of all it is discriminatory because even on analysis of the bad faith argument they are putting in a claimant with an article eighty five case to an extraordinary length in order to make good his case , he first of all has to super declaration presumably that he is entitled to damages , but he ca n't get damages all he 's entitled to is the declaration if then do n't satisfy that claim by paying up and their not going to be ordered by the court to pay up because that 's a claim for damages and you ca n't have that then you have to sue them again on the basis of breach of bad faith , er no other provision in English law would go to that effect and that of course even , even that assumes whether rightly or wrongly and we say possibly wrongly that er , er the failure to comply with the judgment of the declaration would be bad faith within the meaning of the act , but even assuming it 's right it puts a plaintiff suing for breach of article eighty five in the worst position possible
20 He said that , when looking at potential positive uses , there are clues in the effects which cannabis has on certain body functions .
21 Being an inveterate story-teller , Mira is quick to remark on the degenerate effect the dominance of the media has on personal development : ‘ Gradually all our secret treasures have been removed and we 've all been made to share the same abstracted and alienating public knowledge ’ ( 111 ) .
22 The first term is the optimal level of in the one shot game , the second is the benefit from the effect has on future state variables .
23 Regardless of the effects this waste has on marine life and the fishing industry , it has also been noted that there has been a migration of radioactive material from sea back to coast .
24 Mr President I move this special report on behalf of the C E C on the basis that it provides us with the framework to build on the excellent record that the G M B has on improving health , safety and environmental standards at the workplace .
25 It will also meet with resistance from some of the groups that stand to gain from such policies because of the grip that the ideology of inequality has on British society .
26 If the rebels were prudent they would hold the line where it is , and take advantage of the peace talks that the American State Department has by steady diplomacy arranged for them in London .
27 the company has by special resolution resolved that the company be wound up by the court ; ( Provisions ( b ) and ( c ) relate to public companies . )
28 Advanc 'd above pale envy 's threat'ning reach .
29 The glass for this could , Miller suggested , be of inferior quality for the top , but the front should be ‘ glaz 'd with new Castle Glass ’ .
30 Apparell 'd in celestial light ,
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