Example sentences of "[noun] such [noun] have " in BNC.

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1 But every day doctors across the country are trying to cope with the traumatic effect such illnesses have on ordinary people whose family tragedies do not make the headlines .
2 The two major forms such attempts have taken are victim studies and self-report studies .
3 But of course such differences have always been erotically invested , not least in lesbian and gay cultures .
4 Some patients have a history of hospitalization and surgery before the age of 5 , and in some cases such events have occurred before the age of 18 months ( Rosenthal et al. 1972 ; Simpson 1975 ) .
5 ‘ I see what influence such baits have over their betters . ’
6 To a certain degree such borrowings have continued , often prompted by the same underlying sense of insecurity which seeks the new or the modern uncritically rather than as a result of any conscious selection of educational objectives or examination of alternatives .
7 The counsellor has to discover to what extent these feelings are present within the individual , at what point such feelings have arisen in his life , and to persuade him to re-consider his real needs and feelings , as opposed to socially induced attitudes about the quality and extent of his involvement in social life .
8 On the piano such chords have a fine percussive effect .
9 Unfortunately , despite advances in education such hopes have not been realized .
10 Hence cross-boundary flows , and the inability of districts to control referrals from general practitioners , were a major cause of the financial problems such districts have suffered in recent years .
11 The Park is an important recreational resource for both the people of Edinburgh and visitors to the city , and a survey was carried out of the types of use made of the Park , the perceptions of users and the impact such users have on the site .
12 This decision was a clear recognition of the vital role such shops have as social institutions : they help to maintain the fabric of neighbourhood life , they make an economic contribution to the lives of poor people and they provide crucial human contact as part of an informal system of community care .
13 In the past such conflicts have often led to implicit , and sometimes explicit , breaking of Community law relating to free movement .
14 In the past such animals have been models of cleanliness , always asking to go outside before defecating , or confining themselves to a modern litter tray .
15 It is true that Hannah 's work on occupational pension schemes suggests that large companies may have managed the retirement process in order to control their internal labour markets , but for most of the century such schemes have covered only a minority of workers .
16 Beyond these direct consequences such labs have implications for the long term development of the host-country 's scientific capacity and capability .
17 It is not necessary because section 6(3) ( b ) is capable of being given full effect without any such implication : it applies where a school is under-subscribed and yet seeks to refuse certain applicants who have expressed a preference for that school : Parliament has indicated that if spaces are to remain unfilled because of admission criteria such criteria have to be agreed with the local education authority .
18 This is not the first time such suggestions have been made .
19 In this context such formulations have a slightly ambivalent status : " the place where the sun had gone down " ( p. 216 ) or " the water had scooped a bowl out of the rock " ( p. 217 ) are reminiscent of the language of the first part of the novel , but need not , in another context , appear deviant .
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