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

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1 They speculated that this may be related to the fact that patients are referred with chronic or refractory conditions that have proved difficult to treat in general practice .
2 However , according to Zakrewski the government has ruled that the duty-free import quotas will only be divided up among home-grown or foreign companies that have been assembling in Poland for two years , while other firms will face levies at the old rates .
3 Education officers are aware of many possibilities for using and interpreting the site , and can often pass on methods or good ideas that have proved successful with other groups .
4 All oriental rug designs can be broadly divided into those which employ naturalistic representations of living forms and those which employ either totally geometric forms , or naturalistic forms that have been so abstracted that their origins are no longer recognizable .
5 The rest are second- third- or fourth-preference votes that have been allowed in the end to decide the issue between him and his chief rival , Bear .
6 But nothing has has really changed it 's surely implicit that green field sites will have to be released to meet the justifiable needs for development erm that there are ways clearly to minimize the impact by by first redeveloping the existing sites by by releasing sites in less sensitive locations , or developing sites that have minimal impact on on existing settle settlements or patterns of development un unless in exceptional circumstances there is for example the need for a new settlement .
7 Bear in mind that a fish 's immune system ceases to function below about 50°F … any wounds or bacterial lesions that have not healed by that time will worsen during winter , for unfortunately the bacteria have a lower temperature tolerance than the fish .
8 That method is exactly the one best suited to LBOs or recapitalised firms that have overpaid for themselves and can not meet their debts .
9 I say simply that I support the views of my hon. Friend the Member for Chichester ( Mr. Nelson ) and of the hon. Member for Middlesbrough ( Mr. Bell ) rather than other views that have been expressed today .
10 As noted in the introduction to this chapter , the theory of fiscal federalism , which tries to explain the rationale for , and the optimum size of , local government , can appear rather removed from the historical and political accidents that have helped to shape the pattern and prerogatives of state and local government .
11 Any examination of nineteenth-century popular culture then necessarily involves confronting the basic cultural and political values that have determined British and American society in the modern era .
12 Moreover , hybrid coalitions overcome the organisational and political problems that have been associated with individual scientists/industry relations .
13 In a nutshell , development and democracy — the beginnings of a transformation of the discriminatory economic and political relationships that have held West Belfast down since the rise of industrial capitalism in the north-east of Ireland .
14 We therefore , sir , have before us today to consider these two sites , D thirty nine and D forty , in the context of the relevant and duly-made objections that have been made , and they are the simple question is , should these sites be in the within the greenbelt or within the inset .
15 Can we be assured that those regional representatives will reflect the political majority in those regions and will not simply be Government nominees , as we have seen in so many quangos and regional bodies that have been set up in recent years ?
16 The process of preparing Jean-Baptiste Lully 's ballets for the new edition of his complete works has brought out a number of notational and textual questions that have direct relevance for future performances .
17 Instead they would be forced into a ‘ reactive ’ relationship with the governing body and thus the school could lose the creative and professional energies that have made it so effective .
18 Thus , for eurobond firms London has offered a pool of suitably trained labour ; in recent years , low levels of personal and corporate taxation ; a reasonable tax regime for financial instruments ( e.g. ability to issue bearer eurobonds that effectively pay interest gross and absence of turnover taxes — a particular handicap for the Swiss ) ; a supply of suitable premises ; the absence , since 1979 , of exchange controls ( although initially exchange controls were seen as an advantage , since eurobonds did not interfere with onshore sterling markets ) ; prudential and monetary regulations that have not historically tended significantly to raise the cost of funds , distort or prevent competition among domestic or international intermediaries ; English law ( widely accepted as a basis for international financial business ) ; the English language ; and political stability .
19 But in South Africa today , and surely for a good many years to come , there are also additional considerations that demand from a large company actions and policies that go beyond its immediate business interests and seek to ameliorate the excessive social and economic imbalances that have developed in our society .
20 to identify the political and economic groups that have an incentive either to promote and support particular prevention policies or to obstruct and oppose them ;
21 In other words , the proposals are framed in a political and social void which does not engage with the sorts of social , political and economic changes that have recently been experienced by all .
22 This is especially true in the light of the many more recent and post-independence projects that have failed , despite the often sizeable investments in the form of aid .
23 Featuring new and experimental piece by OYT members and other artists , an entertaining mixture of new talent and fresh pieces that have been developed during the spring season .
24 Linell , however , provides a basis for pursuing both questions by indicating ‘ the extent to which linguistics , like most other sciences , is still dependent on important events of the past , both technological inventions … and practical political goals and social concerns that have motivated the practice of linguistic science since antiquity ’ ( ibid. p. 1 ) .
25 Before we go on to consider these studies of local politics , think about other major economic and social changes that have taken place within Britain since the mid-1970s — such as deindustrialization , or the large increase in home ownership .
26 In the post-war period there has developed a rather more critical awareness of how societies operate : fewer people simply sit back and accept their societies unthinkingly — they see that alongside the many technological and social advances that have been made there still exist problem areas like over-population , poverty and crime .
27 This concept of strategy , and the attempt to relate the macro and micro factors that have a bearing on teacher action , constitute the current research interest of a number of educational sociologists .
28 For one thing , the sheer range and historical variation of the sites where encounters between ‘ white ’ and ‘ other ’ have taken place and the immense variety of specialized and popular discourses that have operated in these encounters have by now put into circulation a multitude of selective images .
29 This may not be very accurate as a depiction of what actually happened , but it is extremely valuable in showing the myths and popular interpretations that have grown up afterwards .
30 The government has a list of long-promised infrastructure projects that could make up for the fall in private investment , though a bitter dispute in progress between the government and foreign banks that have lent 20 billion baht ( $187m ) for an elevated motorway in Bangkok may make finance for future projects harder to come by .
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