Example sentences of "[art] [noun] have [to-vb] [prep] " in BNC.

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1 The members of the Board have to decide on the best methods of bringing work and money into the region .
2 So The Shamen have to win over the college/alternative scene .
3 Er , I must declare an , an interest because I am a , a court lawyer , but I think that a lot of people say no because of the media pres , presentation , you only hear bad stories , they do n't hear the good , good stories about the attempts to make the courts more efficient and I think that on the whole and with the circumstances that the courts have to deal with they do a very good job .
4 The possibility of asking such questions shows how far the courts have to go in dealing with the issues raised by representative standing .
5 In applying the test , the courts have to bear in mind the balance between the plaintiff 's investment in the product and the protection of free competition .
6 Gary Wilmot could possibly do it as , like me , he was a contestant on the show and would therefore understand the awesome fear the contestants have to cope with .
7 The rest of the prisoners have to rely on drugs being smuggled in occasionally by visitors as a gift or by prison staff .
8 Final sentence ( which sums up the paragraph ) : ( 4 ) In The Great Gatsby Fitzgerald picks up the theme : the valley of ashes is the general locale , all the characters of the story have to pass through it .
9 There is no such thing as bad publicity , and sometimes the only way to force change is to be anti-social and become a problem which eventually the authorities have to deal with .
10 There are problems with the way the sodium attacks the materials of the lamps and the very high temperature that the lamps have to run at .
11 In particular consider time limits — both for enacting and for advising , perhaps the performers have to spend at least a minute improvising before they can request advice .
12 But Mr Taylor said : ‘ The PFA have to look after their own affairs and we already have Professor Sir John Wood in that very role .
13 The Branches have to depend upon the voluntary support of the membership to fulfil what many see as their prime role , and where once the polytechnics were able heavily to subsidise a service of CPD seminars or even help run an ‘ in-house ’ programme , they can no longer operate in this way and have to charge for the events on a full cost basis .
14 The radial Spanish trunk network had to contend with one of the most difficult geographies in Europe , which means that most routes from Madrid to the coast have to cross at least one mountain range , while in Britain the major centres are connected across relatively easy terrain .
15 In the absence of some specification which states how long a product should last under normal use without manifesting defects ( whether or not due to normal wear and tear ) , the parties have to resort to the express or implied warranties of merchantable quality , or the express or implied rights of rejection .
16 In one sense they are the British equivalent of political advertising on American television ‘ but they differ from such advertising in three very important ways : first , PFB broadcasting is free ( although the parties have to bear at least some of the production costs — indeed , all of the production costs if they wish to use private production facilities ) ; second , the number of PEB broadcasts is fixed by agreement between broadcasters and the parties to reflect ( roughly ) the current popular standing of the parties ( in 1987 Labour , the Liberal-SDP Alliance , and the Conservatives got exactly equal time for PEBs while other parties received very much less ) ; third , the broadcasters have insisted , against the politicians ’ wishes , that PEBs be short programmes typically ten minutes long , rather than high-impact adverts of perhaps twenty or thirty seconds ' duration .
17 The goodies have to travel in one coach , the baddies in another , ’ Harvey Goldsmith admitted .
18 Here the engineers have to carry out most of their work on Sundays when traffic is light , but this often entails diversions and extended journey times followed by temporary speed restrictions for a few further days at the beginning of each week .
19 The rats have to turn in a certain direction in a T-maze in order not to be electrically shocked or in order to be fed .
20 Powerboating is run much on the same line as cars … the pilots have to qualify in practising …
21 The troops have to sleep in cramped conditions on the floor with up to 20 in a single room .
22 On the other hand it means the crocodiles have to live on a farm .
23 However , such documents have usually been compiled for purposes other than research and the investigators have to glean from them what appears relevant to their study .
24 The ideas have to come from the facts .
25 Oh no , the er , to , to maintain authenticity , the people in the band have to look as if they would looked in nineteen forty , which is why er Sally Edwards who 's the Vera Lynn look-alike er would be more authentic than Vera Lynn herself .
26 The other participants in the meeting have to rendezvous at a similar studio , of which there are nine in Britain .
27 In this regard it can be seen that in order for the catechesis to work effectively the various members of the group have to work as a team — the L.C. is responsible for presenting the symbol well ; having a good story that echoes the goal clearly ; and providing the opportunity for EACH person to share their story .
28 For each rocket , there is a set of five questions which the teams have to answer in order to reach Mars .
29 ‘ All the grown-ups have to help in getting food for the community .
30 ( 8 ) The more female ducks the males have to look at the more time they spend looking at them .
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