Example sentences of "have [to-vb] with [noun sg] " in BNC.
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1 | The example cited is something like a dentist 's surgery where the system has to cope with payroll , patient records , appointments and the like . |
2 | Apart from possible dust and fungal spores from hay and straw , he also has to cope with ammonia from urine , carbon dioxide from his lungs , water vapour and so on . |
3 | Well , er not a lot is , is , is the honest answer , we , we work very hard at it of course , but er the truth is that er the only rights that people have are rights that can be enforced by law , and er in , in law , the only people that the local authority has to provide with accommodation are people who er have children who are particularly vulnerable , and there are very strict definitions of that . |
4 | He added : ‘ Even a man like Christ has to meet with unbelief . ’ |
5 | Accuracy has to do with behaviour , acquisition has to do with knowledge . |
6 | Accuracy has to do with behaviour , acquisition has to do with knowledge . |
7 | Climate has to do with behaviour , attitudes and feelings which are fairly easily observed . |
8 | Their change of mind has to do with brute economics , the new Europe , and long-lived discontent . |
9 | It has to do with land as well as landscape , and the right to farm in a time-honoured way . ’ |
10 | Maybe it 's not easy to see what all this has to do with cancer , but you must bear with me if I tell you that it has . |
11 | The second change has to do with gravity . |
12 | It has to do with music . |
13 | I feel they are rooted in something that has to do with culture , with a sense of history , a sense of past , a sense of tradition . |
14 | Nothing illustrates better the fluidity of viewpoints by which we can swing towards and away from egoism , and how little it has to do with morality . |
15 | ‘ I think all of this has to do with reputation , and because he is Vinnie Jones . |
16 | It is possible that it has to do with cannibalism . |
17 | One , which need not concern us , has to do with imagery . |
18 | The first has to do with purity ( originally in the diamond trade ) and the second with value consequent upon that purity . |
19 | This is partly due to the rapid growth of the financial services industry which has increased the demand for actuaries , but it also has to do with expansion of the skills which actuaries have to offer . |
20 | And it has to do with bed hygiene , for you do n't become allergic to the mite — you become allergic to the mite 's dung . |
21 | Some of the compromise has to do with money . |
22 | While ‘ gamatangium ’ has to do with cell-formation , to ‘ gamahuche ’ is to practise fellatio or cunnilingus . |
23 | Aside from the steep learning curve the program presents , which is almost acceptable in the DOS environment ( ask any WordPerfect user ) , one of the recurring niggles has to do with compliance to established Windows norms . |
24 | I think part of it has to do with recognition — I remember listening to my own grandmother 's mysterious pronouncements — and part with a renewed sense of the strangeness of it . |
25 | But perfect love drives out fear , because fear has to do with punishment . |
26 | I think er a lot of it has to do with confidence , the more confidence you get the quieter driving erm , I 'm afraid the more aggressive you become whether your a man or a woman but er quiet . |
27 | For women , the measurement of the thread has to do with continuity ; it is the thread that runs through all complexity , an underlying order linking past and future . |
28 | Another possible one has to do with time . |
29 | Eliot comes across as the sad man who sees double , as a living embodiment of the proposition that the double has to do with pain and with relief from pain , with the search , in such circumstances , for someone other . |
30 | One has to do with justice . |