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

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1 That has given the whole company a step up , including Crate , who , as we mentioned earlier , are now making use of the systems that I came here with . ’
2 A club spokesman said : ‘ It was a win over an in-form side that has given the whole team great hope and we will go to Wasps with nothing to lose . ’
3 ‘ Malcolm Marshall coming back has given the whole place and all the players such a lift . ’
4 Sir , The current debate on fair competition between booksellers and book clubs has exposed a whole area of concerns for booksellers .
5 The web of confusion that has surrounded the whole Nimslo venture is now so tangled that not even Nimslo can say exactly how much investment the company has attracted .
6 He has let the whole school down . ’
7 After detailing her mental history he added , ‘ Lotte has vivid fantasies and has built a whole world of dreams .
8 Mr Corman has shot the whole thing in colour and in a cinema-verité style that makes it resemble a documentary . ’
9 Consequently , it alone , of all our domesticated animals , has absorbed the whole attention , until very lately , of the professors of that establishment .
10 The history of the British car industry ( refer to Chapter 4 ) , which has seen a whole series of mergers , is one example which shows that the potential benefits of mergers are not automatically secured .
11 ‘ I just ca n't believe it may all go to waste , ’ says Alison Knapp , a theatre manager who has seen the whole project through since it was first planned in 1983 .
12 She has seen the whole thing .
13 Sterland has missed the whole season so far with ankle ligament damage .
14 That has threatened the whole concept of compulsory competitive tendering and we will keep threatening the government 's compulsory competitive tendering regime by using TUPE and the acquired rights directive as the legal shield to protect our members ' jobs and public services from the Tylers of this world .
15 They hurled stones , and thereafter stones — in place of the Kalashnikov — became the prime weapon and symbol of the ‘ blessed ’ Intifada which has transformed the whole nature of the Arab-
16 Since then at the planning sub-committee Mr has produced a whole load of new made-up figures which pretend that the situation is far worse than that .
17 So each link in the system has to handle the whole range , and bandwidth , of services provided .
18 The cop has watched the whole thing .
19 Fellow Belgian Ann Demeulemeester has inspired a whole generation of fashion school graduates with her heightened minimalism .
20 But with the introduction of all manner of high-tech fabrics from super-wicking next-to-the-skin materials through to lightweight breathable waterproofs , the integrated approach to clothing has become a whole lot more attractive .
21 Over the last twenty years in Britain industrial action has affected a whole range of essential services from water , electricity and fire-fighting to the Royal Mail , public transport and health .
22 Coming at a time of deep economic recession , the drought has affected the whole economy of Australia .
23 The peace dividend has affected the whole region with airfield closures , the merging of the Gloucestershire Regiment , and reduction in contract work .
24 And as United moved into fifth place , with the help of a rare Paul Ince strike , the Welsh centre-forward said : ‘ Eric 's arrival has affected the whole club — not just the attacking players .
25 It was a great joke while it lasted , but now a humble three-piece band from Seattle has rendered the whole joke redundant .
26 To understand music-hall and vaudeville one has to fight through layers of myth and romance and one has to undo a whole view of the past that uses nostalgia for pre-1914 as a touchstone .
27 It is good to be able to talk to somebody who has experienced the whole spectrum of drugs because then they know what the hell you 're talking about , y'know .
28 Peru was beginning to share in an increased flow of foreign investment that has benefited the whole continent .
29 That has settled the whole matter .
30 Recently , the tourism business has invented a whole host of ghouls and apparitions , from phantom organists to the ghost of the bull-running , so that overnight Stamford became one of the most haunted towns in England .
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