Example sentences of "have about [art] [noun] " in BNC.

  Next page
No Sentence
1 The quality and amount of information you have about a subject can mark you out as a specialist who is an invaluable source of advice for others .
2 Theories of foregrounding , both linguistic and cognitive ( see , for example , van Peer 1986 or Cook 1990 ) , can help focus the intuitions readers have about a text .
3 They used to work say one week and have about a month off or go on the dole for a month .
4 I have about a pound and a half in a gigantic envelope …
5 Firstly , make sure you have about an inch of waste knitting , separated if possible from the main yarn by a ravel cord .
6 In addition to coping with the illness itself many sufferers also have to cope with the misconceptions other people have about the illness .
7 Might not St Paul or Thomas Aquinas raise an eyebrow at the idea that their views continue to be cited , given the knowledge which we now have about the origin of humankind or the biological relation of woman to man ? l6
8 You can select addresses from any information you have about the person ; you can include comments and notes and , as a perfectly natural progression , a SUPERFILE mailing list grows into a customer database as people take up your tempting offers .
9 Well we 've talked mostly about various difficulties that bona fide complainants in the public have about the insurance company , what about the other way around ?
10 The sort of objectives which are appropriate for advertising are objectives concerned with awareness and understanding of the brand , and with the attitudes and opinions people have about the brand .
11 So um that kind of thing b according to Campbell may be one of the reasons why the Cleveland scandal was so scandalous was because it intersected with a number of cultural fears we have about the relationship between sexuality and the anus for some reason .
12 Integrity holds within political communities , not among them , so any opinion we have about the scope of the requirement of coherence makes assumptions about the size and character of these communities .
13 As we shall show later , what people mean by their actions depends on what expectations they have about the actions of others .
14 It would certainly include : the physical lay-out of the houses we live in and of the settlements of which they form a part ; the general pattern of conventional procedures by which foodstuffs and other necessities of life are produced and distributed and finally consumed ; the way children are brought up ; the way tasks are allocated to different members of the household ; the ideas we have about the nature of reality and of the cosmos , our sense of what is the proper way to behave towards kin and neighbours and persons in authority ; the kinds of clothes and the styles of language which are appropriate to different occasions , etc .
15 Bu , but o , on the other hand yo you 've got to se you 've to er give the information that you have about the feeling in the church !
16 Take two felt-tip pens , of different colours , and underline in one colour all the words that catch the meaning you intended , that evoke strongly the feelings you have about the room .
  Next page