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

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1 Cockle Button , Cockle Ben , a children 's book he wrote in the 1930s , has remarkably good illustrations .
2 He has remarkably little choice of action or initiative if he is going to comply with the flight manual and his company 's operations manual and at the same time carry out an economic flight .
3 Has outstandingly helpful staff , and a huge , broad , very reasonably priced stock of academic books .
4 Processing signs has clear right hemisphere involvement ( Lubert , 1975 ; McKeever et al. , 1976 ; Manning et al. , 1977 ; Poizner and Lane , 1978 ; Poizner , Battison and Lane , 1979 ) .
5 Each of these new technologies has clear offensive uses .
6 The important thing is that the whole programme is planned in a way that brings out learning in depth , allowing for sustained involvement with the children , and has clear developing purposes .
7 The upper class has clear distinctive characteristics which give it such a sense of identity : not only its ownership of productive property ( the fundamental and defining feature ) but also its distinctive culture and status hierarchy .
8 This may not be a totally convincing critique of modern society , but it has clear modern relevance and is more than mere dislike .
9 A horizontal model , for its part , has clear educational merits .
10 The line ‘ My cradled infant slumbers peacefully ’ , has clear Christian connotations .
11 Rose of Lima 's own understanding of this has clear biographical origins which are worth noting .
12 This very rigid institutional division of labour has rather serious implications in the public law field of decision-making processes , however .
13 She has rather long arms with slightly curved fingers , short legs and broad feet .
14 They make a thing of this strong-box business , but ours mostly has rather dull securities and family papers in it .
15 It also has rather unfortunate connotations of self-styled guerrilla activists prowling the Dales ready to plunge daggers into the tyres of quarry wagons at night or to fire catapults at drivers daring enough to run their gauntlet during daylight hours .
16 Julian Sands plays a dissipated Swiss ; Ian Holm an American writer ; and Judy Davis pops up in the second leg of her dual role as Holm 's wife , with whom Weller has incredibly kinky rubber-monster sex .
17 It has little intellectual sharpness. and its theology is often impeccable .
18 Has conspicuously long wings , with which it soars , wheels and glides like a harrier , in addition to normal slow , flapping owl-like flight , and wing-clapping circular display flight .
19 Breeding male has conspicuously horizontal head and neck pattern of grey , black and white .
20 What changed the picture were two related processes : commercialization and the formation of modern States , the second of which has most immediate importance for nationalism .
21 I want to see which has most natural speed .
22 This potent and selective 5HTID receptor agonist has predominantly cranial vasoconstrictor effects in animal and human studies and can be given subcutaneously ( 6 mg ) or orally ( 100 mg ) .
23 That 's right , that 's right , and er , you know , we see this in , in all sorts of sectors , where you know , protectionism has effectively prohibited trade .
24 Using a closed-loop ministep control with rotor position obtained by waveform detection , however , the phase currents can be adjusted so that the rotor is pulled back to the demanded position , giving a system which has effectively infinite stiffness ( Fig. 7.1 5b ) .
25 At this stage , evaluate unc and solve the eigenproblem unc for M. Then a new approximation , which has mutually orthogonal columns , is
26 Norwich manager Mike Walker has less complex selection problems .
27 Her disadvantages are : I. That she has less technical skill than a man and is not so useful all round .
28 Indeed we no longer employ the word with full assurance , or are confident of what we mean by philosophical ‘ materialism ’ , now that we are forbidden to think of atoms as little balls out of which a universe could be constructed ; twentieth century physics has less substantial entities which would slip through one 's fingers .
29 Now that the line has been fitted , the residuals tell us how actual chronic sickness rates differ from expectations formed on the basis of death rates ; the West Midlands region , for example , has less chronic sickness than you would expect from its death rate , but East Anglia has more .
30 Resolving the question of whether palaeocurrent flow in Torridonian Scotland was predominantly westerly or northerly is important to those interested in Scotland 's geological history , but has less external interest than the solution of the genetic code problem had for all biologists .
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