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

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1 You will have ample time for questions when I have completed the reading of this statement . ’
2 By so doing he changed the very character of the conflict , for through the creation of a wider involvement in its success he tried to ensure that he , and his successors , would have broad support for the continued involvement of England and Englishmen in France .
3 With the features introduced so far , we still do not have complete distinctiveness for all vowels : and , for example , are identical in feature specification so far , as are and , and , and .
4 Thus , the local authority will have parental responsibility for the child , a duty to review the case in accordance with the regulations , a duty to allow reasonable contact as specified in s34 ( see 8(b) below ) and a duty to comply with s23 and the relevant regulations when placing the child .
5 The person named in the order will have parental responsibility for the child while the order is in force .
6 While a care order is in force the local authority will have parental responsibility for the child .
7 They made no mention of an elected authority and insisted that Israel would have sole responsibility for security .
8 The present level of the Japanese currency , they warned , " may have undesirable consequences for the global adjustment process " .
9 From January 1994 , it will have total responsibility for the mid-range market and , with a ‘ broader range of offerings and a better combination of specialised expertise , IBM 's share of the small and mid-sized company market should increase perceptibly ’ .
10 At the other extreme , a speaker may produce an utterance with no expectation at all about the way in which it will be understood and hearers will have total responsibility for its interpretation .
11 The core of weekday daytime programming is the ‘ playlist ’ , which has three major uses for Radio I : it provides an overall sound or ‘ station feel ’ ; it is an effective way to monitor how often the most popular records are played ; and it makes a group responsibility out of a decision which may have far-reaching effects for individual musicians and the music industry .
12 This is the first public inquiry into an IDO registration and the outcome could have far-reaching consequences for many other IDOs across Wales and England .
13 That could have far-reaching implications for the country .
14 On economic and monetary union , it would be irresponsible for any Government to ask the people of Britain to decide now that we should adopt , at a future date , a single European currency which will have far-reaching implications for the conduct of monetary and economic union .
15 It is certainly the case that a student with , say , a moderately good pass in A-level French may have little capacity for the responsive reading of French poetry .
16 It may also affect the propensity of workers who become unemployed to remain union members , since the cost of membership becomes relatively more expensive and any collective bargaining advance which the union secures will have little relevance for them .
17 Armed with Cardiopulmonary Resuscitation , one would have little excuse for not being able to run a calm and well-organised cardiac arrest .
18 Implicit in this analysis is the view that Labour would have little scope for raising additional revenue by further increases in income tax directed at the better-off .
19 I note that the report to which the hon. Gentleman refers says : ’ Labour , if elected , would have little scope for increased spending in the early years unless it were willing to increase taxes by more than it has indicated . ’
20 Looking back over the season it seems to me supporters can have little cause for complaint .
21 On the one hand some teachers saw the process as a hindrance — as something they had to do for the LEA and which would have little consequence for themselves .
22 In addition , the 1989 MMC Report , conceived as an attack in the public interest on the monopoly power of the major brewers and requiring the ‘ untying ’ of large chunks of their tied estates , may have devastating consequences for traditional pubs .
23 We all know that Labour 's proposals for a statutory minimum wage would have devastating consequences for job prospects right across our country .
24 Fanny will have fifty pounds for wedding clothes , and I 'll give her five hundred pounds the day she marries you . ’
25 yeah , but then you 'll only have fifty P for lunch and that 's not enough
26 Yet another type of vocabulary can have difference in meaning for patient and nurse and thereby give rise to difficulties — words describing parts of the body , though having a particular anatomical reference , do not necessarily have that reference for lay people , even intelligent lay people .
27 No goals as yet in the other game in group A against Charlton although as I warned you earlier , I do n't think we 'll have that score for you tonight because it is being played in Italy and er our chances of getting that score through the er computer here are remote to put it mildly .
28 The detective had told him that Alexander Atkins and his companion insisted that he meet them on Boxing Night as they would have definite instructions for him .
29 Crisis Line does have political support for its work with victims of Post Traumatic Stress Disorder .
30 Where a protagonist may have political reasons for wishing to differentiate one theological position from another , he may place a high value on scientific results that assist the differentiation .
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