Example sentences of "[pers pn] have [adv] [adj] [verb] with " in BNC.
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1 | Until a year ago I had very little do with women in the sexual sense . |
2 | ‘ I have relatively little to do with young people , ’ she remarked , |
3 | She had too much to do with the new house and the new baby , you said . ’ |
4 | If you have that many to deal with , spacing them 2ft ( 0.6m ) apart and 3ft ( 0.9m ) between the rows would be ideal . |
5 | Advanced role-playing games sounded like more fun to play , although I soon discovered they had far more to do with train-spotting than they did with handcuffs , celery and a latex grope-suit . |
6 | They have as much to do with the defects of our criminal justice system . |
7 | But it has comparatively little to do with his holistic claim that individuals are merely the ‘ supports ’ or ‘ bearers ’ of social practices . |
8 | It has very little to do with her life , and they would be bizarre parents or catechetists who really wanted the girls in their charge to emulate Rose of Lima in any very direct way . |
9 | The comprehensive and pervasive nature of planning makes it easy to forget that it has very little to do with private rights and restrictions . |
10 | Much of it has very little to do with what you are , and that is an emotion I have always felt and will always feel . |
11 | It has very little to do with style , innovation , or direction , says John Davidson . |
12 | It has far less to do with strategy than with financial bargains struck in the market-place of Whitehall , and with efforts to contain galloping inflation in weapons procurement . |
13 | Ronni shot her response at him like a reflex action , a little guiltily aware that it had rather less to do with the truth and rather more to do with her sudden need for a shield . |
14 | Rufus wondered if he might have invented that part because he had so much to do with wombs in the course of his own daily life . |