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

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1 ‘ In the past no one individual has had responsibility for training , but in an effort to formalise and develop staff training a working party has just been set up ( to be chaired by the Branch Development Officer ) to organise and develop staff training at all levels ’ .
2 MIDDLESBROUGH 'S Young Sports Personality of the Year , Stephen Markham , has had requests for grants turned down by Middlesbrough Council and Cleveland County Council .
3 your employee has had SSP for 28 weeks in the PIW
4 John , whose dazzling style won an Olympic gold medal at the 1976 Winter Games , has had treatment for more than a year at St Mary 's hospital , Paddington , West London .
5 After all , the Conservative Party has had provision for electing a new Leader while in office since 1975 and it has not been used in that circumstance .
6 Manager Ray Hankin has had inquiries for players but no concrete offers .
7 There is no virtue in several injections of insulin if the patient is well controlled on a single injection each day , but this state of affairs is unlikely to be the case in a patient who has had diabetes for a number of years and has little residual β-cell function .
8 Aiming to raise £750,000 , The Spirit of 1992 has had approval for BES status from the Inland Revenue as the company will be both manufacturing and trading .
9 Kinnear , who has had enquiries for midfielders Warren Barton and Robbie Earle , said : ‘ I want to hang on to my players as long as possible — my job 's hard enough as it is .
10 The development of the zones has had implications for surrounding areas .
11 The physiotherapist has to have enthusiasm for the task she and the patient are undertaking .
12 It is the story that has to be meaningful to , and has to have significance for , the individual reader .
13 ‘ Every competitor has to have respect for the opposition .
14 But erm I know a student who was at B H S , near she was saying how she 'd had training for er delivering team briefings .
15 Only a short time before she 'd had Penry for company while she knitted .
16 Are you saying that , in fact , not having had sex for so long is a problem for you ? ’
17 Compared with the 165 males , the 143 female patients had a significantly higher mean random haemoglobin A 1 value despite having had diabetes for fewer years ( females : mean 9.5 years ; males : mean 10.3 years ; p=0.36 ) .
18 For I liked — I was amazed , never yet having had time for or interest in such delights — I liked to be touched by him .
19 Apart from the traffic implications in grid-locking the roads of Caerphilly , up Manor way , it might even have had repercussions for the hon. Gentleman 's constituents .
20 In the first place it is noticeable that the great theme of his two Councils was the same as that of the Roman Council of 1059 , when the first effective legislation on clerical celibacy was initiated : it almost seems as if this subject had matured in his mind since that date ; certainly his early Deploratio virginitatis male amissae suggests that he may have had cause for thought on this subject .
21 It 's for sure that he 'd have had respect for the course .
22 Had she lived , I felt sure he would not have had time for me .
23 This original language does not seem to have had words for ‘ vine ’ or ‘ palm-tree ’ so it probably did not start in the Mediterranean .
24 ‘ When they told me what it was , I thought I was going to have to have injections for the rest of my life . ’
25 The rail link between Djibouti and Addis Ababa via Dire Dawa was suspended from Oct. 4 as clashes continued between EPRDF forces and Issa groups which since the late 19th century had had responsibility for security along the line .
26 She did not see that if he had had rabbit for dinner it would be a case of ‘ Poor Flopsy Bunnies ’ ’ ( White , 1954 , p.35 ) .
27 He later revealed that he had had fevers for at least six weeks before arriving in Britain and was HIV positive .
28 It had been bored or dug or had occurred naturally at an incline of about thirty degrees , so that all the way down into the mine , holding onto the rope , they had had purchase for their feet , had almost been able to walk don , though describing it thus made a dull and orthodox act of what had been the great adventure of their boyhood .
29 One-half of the trainees had derived more confidence from attending courses , ranging from ‘ now being able to feed lambs through a stomach tube ’ ( this from a 50-year old farmer who had had sheep for 30 years ) to ‘ the confidence to tackle all but the most difficult workshop repair jobs ’ .
30 From that moment he had had respect for Blanche : he knew it took a rare combination of self-confidence and courage to admit she had been wrong .
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