Example sentences of "[conj] [noun pl] have [prep] " in BNC.

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1 Involuntary reception into care : if a child or young person is in a situation of acute danger the youth department is entitled to intervene , but parents or guardians have to be informed immediately and the case be brought before a court for a care decision before the end of the day following the admission ( s. 42 ) , Where force is necessary , the police department must act but under the professional guidance of the youth department .
2 Similarly , pets such as dogs , cats or budgerigars have to be provided for , if it is not practical for anyone to look after them while the patient can not .
3 Dr Roger Nourish , head of the team of microbiologists within Britain 's Health and Safety Executive ( HSE ) , which inspects factories , says that ‘ even in microbially low-risk processes , like the processes carried out so far — which do not involve infections or toxic hazards — allergenic risks arising from workers ’ exposure to foreign proteins or polypeptides have to be considered ’ .
4 To observe 3-D fluctuation conductivity , large concentrations of impurities or defects have to be induced , and these are usually accompanied by granularity or reduced dimensionality .
5 When a child or young person is received into care a placement with a carer or carers has to be made .
6 Sex morality was the area par excellence where medics had to be governed by religious responsibility .
7 ‘ The love and affection which these ploughmen or horsemen had for their animals was quite extraordinary .
8 These can create even more stress on the individuals left with the burden , especially in the credit control department , where targets have to be met and cash pulled in by certain deadlines .
9 We have not mentioned what happens if the cause of death is unknown and inquests or autopsies have to be carried out ; or if the deceased person wanted to donate organs ; if they wanted to be buried in another country , and so on .
10 Listen attentively , and if information or details have to be recorded , write them down clearly and legibly , as they are given .
11 It does not mean there has to be a fight or blows have to be inflicted .
12 With ultra delicate end-effectors it could be used in microsurgery where veins or arteries have to be connected .
13 In a hospital or a bank , where records have to be kept for a long time , the files would not be deleted routinely , but stored in archives until the expiry of the prescribed storage period .
14 He also ordered that all public meetings or conferences had to be cleared with the Mayor 's office three days in advance .
15 Extending this aim meant that signs had to be invented when no obvious word — sign equivalent existed .
16 It is certainly true that states have in the past used methods and means of warfare not outlawed by any specific prohibition although running counter to general principles , and they have sought to justify this by reference either to the principle of reprisal or that of military effectiveness .
17 The exception is , of course , in the pronouncement that shareholders have in effect surrendered their power to professional management , a pronouncement which does not so much face the central question of the rights of ownership as to try to pass it by .
18 The fact that adjectives have to be placed in front of nouns in English , for instance , means that their occurrence in this position has little or no significance because it is not the result of choice .
19 This stipulated that products had to be fit for their purpose and meet standards of appearance and finish being free from minor defects as well as safe and durable .
20 Slowing down means that roads have to be crossed with more care and that bad road and pavement conditions are greater hazards .
21 The poll asked : ‘ In building roads it sometimes happens that roads have to be built through or across sites of natural beauty or historical interest .
22 Mrs Castle 's contribution to this cornucopia of political wisdom and strategic insight was that policies had to be put in their philosophical context to win consent .
23 just as policy has to be interpreted by local authorities and individual schools , so ideologies have to be translated into specific policies and practices , and this may lead to inconsisten-cies .
24 In the earlier regime it was accepted that rules had to be general to some extent , and open to change to allow for adaptation to changing circumstances .
25 Even so the sum of money Minton had donated was so large that drinkers had to be brought in from the street .
26 The test now is whether the degree of carelessness amounted to gross or blatant negligence , recognising the practicalities of everyday life and that risks have to be undertaken .
27 Following the case of Sofi v Prudential and the 1989 I O B Report the test now is whether the degree of carelessness amounted to gross or blatant negligence , recognising the practicalities of everyday life and that risks have to be undertaken .
28 Longman did particularly well in the U K , although coeternal markets were difficult and er , sales in the schools markets in er , North America was hard going for Addison Wesley , with U S physical problems restricting the , amou money that schools had to er , had to use .
29 Rutter et al , in a detailed analysis of 12 schools in an inner London borough , make bold statements about the influence that schools have upon pupil attainment and behaviour .
30 The aim of this thesis is to explore the memories that drivers have for everyday driving situations and to decide how such memories may be affected by the feelings of risk they experienced in the situation .
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