Example sentences of "both [noun pl] have a [noun] " in BNC.

  Next page
No Sentence
1 Both institutions have a Joni in their collection .
2 It is also worth noting that patients with active chronic duodenitis in both groups had a total of 20 of 25 duodenal ulcers ( 80% ) diagnosed in all patients ( χ 2 =15.38 , p<0.001 v patients without active duodenitis ) .
3 The speaker assumes that the listener shares the speaker 's need for closeness and the view that both parties have a lot in common .
4 Because the heating effect and therefore the temperature rise is proportional to the square of the current , both meters have a square-law output scale and , following calibration with a known direct input , give the true r.m.s. value irrespective of waveform .
5 Both the Holgate School and Solihull SFC have started to scan regularly the software pages as both libraries have a policy to provide information on and , where appropriate , software materials in the library .
6 The former England manager , who was in Lisbon over the weekend to finalise his two-year contract , saw both teams have a man sent off either side of Hamed Ziad 's 79th-minute winner .
7 Both machines have a pause button for interruptions .
8 Thus if both partners have a commitment to listening and responding swiftly when conflict strikes , the permission to express emotion will be a healthy safety valve for the relationship , and a vital part of its ongoing maintenance .
9 Although both patients have a fever , it is the subtle differences that match the remedy .
10 Both sides have a lot to prove to their fans . ’
11 Both sides have a point : some foxes kill lambs , poultry and game , and some foxes are guilty of no crime greater than the dispatching of mice and earthworms .
12 Both sides have a point to prove Saints that they can bounce back quickly from the Bradford disappointment ; Leeds that they are on a consistent run of wins .
13 Both men had a history of lawlessness , petty felonies and misdemeanours , but this was to be their first foray into serious and hopefully prosperous crime , an opportunity prompted by pure chance .
  Next page