Example sentences of "[verb] traditionally have " in BNC.
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1 | Of course , the left has traditionally had a purely instrumental attitude to culture , leisure , fin . |
2 | But the SA Rugby Board has traditionally had the major slice of South Africa 's rugby cake , built as this has been on white wealth , sponsorship , patronage , assets , expertise , media coverage and the rest . |
3 | The communications industries are especially politically sensitive — because of their impact on employment , on the news media , and because ‘ new technology ’ has traditionally had partisan overtones across Europe . |
4 | Add to this the thin margins on which the industry has traditionally had to rely and a very unstable and uncertain environment for individual firms emerges . |
5 | Gateshead has a large number of low-income families and has traditionally had a poor participation rate in further and higher education . |
6 | Planning in the railways has traditionally had an important political dimension that has sometimes been at odds with its use as an internal business tool . |
7 | The urban Midlands had traditionally had difficulty in filling posts . |
8 | It must be added that vocational schools have traditionally had low status . |
9 | Deaf schools in Britain have traditionally had a long involvement in the Scout and Girl Guide movement , but Scouting has not been confined simply to schoolboys and schoolgirls . |
10 | Teachers seeking advancement have traditionally had to be mobile — much more so than their legal or medical colleagues ; there is everything to be gained by arriving as an unknown quantity in a new school — promotion will usually attend such a move , and all the unfortunate errors perpetrated in one 's early years can be left far behind . |
11 | Tax havens have traditionally had an important role to play in inbound investment to territories with high withholding tax rates . |
12 | Of all the islanders , the Balinese have traditionally had the most uneasy relationship with the sea . |
13 | They operate under Royal Charters , appoint their own staff , decide on their own admissions policies and have traditionally had academic freedom in their teaching and research , though the last of these has arguably been eroded in recent years by the ‘ earmarking ’ of government funds for specific subjects , and the need to seek sponsors for particular projects . |
14 | Third , " consumers " — that is , patients , their families , potential patients — have traditionally had least influence over the kind of service they receive . |