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

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1 As we saw in Chapter 5 , he suggested that the style adopted depends upon the perception that leaders have of their subordinates .
2 If Parliament had meant to say that any distribution or publication should suffice , it could very easily have said so ; the courts are bound to make sense of the words that Parliament has in fact used .
3 What is less well documented , however , is the effect that injunctions have on people who are normally functioning well , when they find themselves in situations that are abnormally intense or challenging — like teachers in school .
4 ‘ Notice the effect that black has on colours — Poussin painted on black canvas , and so did Braque sometimes . ’
5 the possible distorting effect that technology has on attitudes to , and the availability of , other forms of health care — for example , preventive care and the often forgotten possibility of not doing anything ;
6 Again we can see the effect that loss has upon us , where the first stage is shock and disbelief , and an inability to take in the reality of what is being said .
7 A recent NASA research document details the positive effect that plants have in cleaning the air .
8 Of particular importance is the effect that deforestation has on tropical soils .
9 All interviewed felt that there were no simple performance factors that could be used to measure the effect that devolution has on quality .
10 The Marxist value system arose in this vacuum of values and it arose from the multiplying effect that machinery had on man 's labour .
11 She had seen the effect that Michael had on the people around and about .
12 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 .
13 While Labour needs to think hard about a coherent and realistic policy , to give substance to what is otherwise simply a slogan , there were signs in Inverness of regeneration — and a recognition that Labour has for too long taken its political dominance in Scotland for granted .
14 But part , I would suggest , is to be found in the conception that teachers have of what it is to be a teacher and that , in turn , depends on what they believe about the way in which children learn .
15 The same survey found that the more a person smokes the less faith that person has in believing that he or she can stop .
16 One great advantage that Scotland has over New Zealand is that nearly every small town and village is rich in history .
17 The most important element was the difficulty that reformers had in distinguishing between their desire to protect the young girls who were the objects of their concern and their desire to control them .
18 In 1981 NORP was taken over by the Bangladeshi Government , so that the funding that NORP had until then received directly from UNICEF was now channelled through the Government .
19 He was a little the worse for drink and there had been an argument over a bottle of whisky that Drew had in his pocket .
20 It is that pattern of perceptions , feelings , attitudes , goals and values that individuals have about themselves .
21 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 .
22 MB 's is wearing clothes that do not fit in the first example eg. This time he refers to the good opinions that people have of him as new clothes and killing the king would be like throwing away hardly worn clothes .
23 It is the kind of judgement that Hunt had in generous portions , and something that makes him , even today , a capable judge of the more refined points of racing on television .
24 Yeah well I I I obviously I would say this but er I think it 's the best opportunity that people have for a career direction because we we 've redirected a lot of people 's careers in this aspect .
25 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 .
26 Before returning to these implicatures in the next section , let us first illustrate the other major kind of implicatures that Grice had in mind .
27 The second big battle that Russell had in his unswerving pursuit of truth was with German idealism , mainly Hegelian idealism , which by a very curious aberration from the standard empiricism of the British people , took root in Oxford and Cambridge in the last half of the last century , and was almost for a time unchallenged .
28 Again , it seems to follow that the perceptual experiences that observers have in the act of seeing is not uniquely determined by the images on their retinas .
29 By wishes I am referring to the internal directions and aspirations that people have for their own professional lives and development : their preferences , their ambitions , their chosen career path , their enthusiasms and above all their values .
30 We will look a little later ( in chapter seven ) at the effects that disasters have on people , but first we will turn to particular sorts of loss , and some of the group of bereaved people who perhaps need special consideration .
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