Example sentences of "[that] [noun] [adv] have a [adj] " in BNC.

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1 By forges Defoe meant cutlers ' smithies ; it appeared to him that Sheffield already had a pronounced industrial character , and though it was very small by later standards it struck him as being ‘ very populous and large ’ .
2 Robson tires of pointing out that England always have a spare man , but unfortunately this often turns out to be Gary Stevens , an orthodox full-back , perhaps incorrigibly so .
3 Free movement of capital means that investors now have a wider choice of what to buy .
4 It is certainly possible that Mercury once had a molten iron core which has since partly or wholly solidified .
5 But when he discovers from his review of the precedents that mothers already have a legal right to compensation for emotional injury suffered on a direct view of the accident , and therefore that drivers must already insure against causing emotional damage in those circumstances , the question of insurance costs becomes more complex .
6 This means that SCOTVEC now has a unique role , both accrediting and awarding vocational qualifications .
7 Gordon explains that shots usually have a propitious feel to them , and the added ingredient of adventure increases the likelihood of a successful picture .
8 They reminded him of the ignominious episode of the oath-taking , and pointed out that Rodrigo now had a personal ‘ army ’ almost as large as the King 's .
9 Others , focusing on issues such as the inequality in the wages paid to men and women or the violence that women receive at men 's hands , argue that women still have a long way to go before they are fully liberated .
10 I am not saying that disturbances always have a single cause .
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