Example sentences of "that have [verb] with [adj] [noun] " in BNC.

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1 There will be criticism that team discipline off the field is wanting , a complaint that has surfaced with reasonable regularity since before Lord Hawke 's time .
2 The Labour Party is in favour of that element of the " Westminster Model " that has to do with single-party government grounded in secure majorities in the House of Commons and it is , in consequence , opposed to proportional representation .
3 They are disgusted with a decision which must kill off the all-important chance of exposing a form of cheating that has spread with alarming haste as bowlers find ways of getting the old ball to swing violently late .
4 In short , an action succeeds when it fulfils ( i.e. achieves the object of ) the desire that has combined with some belief to cause that action .
5 IT IS a fact that having to deal with all aspects of VAT can give rise to considerable costs for business .
6 IT is a fact that having to deal with all aspects of VAT can give rise to considerable costs for businesses .
7 Her eyes strayed to the card that she still held in her hand and she almost started as she saw , written in plain bold print , a name that had featured with such regularity recently in the headlines of the business section of the local newspaper that she could not fail to recognise it .
8 Fortunately , there always seemed to be a hard core of people who were determined to breathe new life into a tradition that had started with phenomenal success in 1892 under its first president , Billy Hutchinson , of Redcar .
9 For grammars restored to Tory councils ( and the 80-odd that have stayed with Tory authorities ) , the outlook is not quite so bleak .
10 First , it focuses on those aspects of emotion that have to do with prevailing mood , especially changes associated with feelings of depression and elation , though also including other emotional reactions , such as general irritability .
11 The Outer Kingdoms are more worldly as one would expect from nations that have to deal with marauding Norse and Dark Elf raiders .
12 The evidence for the use of these various terms as tempo indications within quite well defined limits is to be found in the many treatises of the period , notably those dealing with the metronome , but most persuasively in those scores that have survived with notated timings for each movement ( see table 2 ) .
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