Example sentences of "[modal v] have [prep] [adj] [noun] " in BNC.

  Next page
No Sentence
1 SCOTVEC is able to offer assistance and advice on the form and content that such training should have for individual qualifications .
2 And there is debate and notable disagreement about the consequences that elections not only do have but should have for public policy .
3 To me , he wrote on 10 February as follows , the invective being tempered by the desire expressed at the beginning that we should have in due course a prolonged tête-à-tête :
4 We get a glimpse of it when Curtis argues , in support of his view that America should have Near Eastern mandates , that this would place her advantageously for the regeneration of post-revolutionary Russia ; as ‘ steward of the Near East ’ , she could ‘ extend to the blind giant the neighbourly hand of a friendship which is open to no suspicion ’ .
5 If this is something we experience as adults , how much more impact reading materials must have upon young readers — readers who are that much more receptive and who are at stages of rapid and profound development .
6 gone to sleep if you were alright No never mind and you 're going the doctor 's we 'll make appointment tomorrow cos you wo n't and if I make one you 'll have to blooming go and do it .
7 Rational people will predict them and thereby annul any effect they might have on real variables .
8 Terry Sangwin , the nurse manager for the medical unit , thought staff in the hospital still needed much more information about what would happen , and she feared the planners did n't realise the impact community care might have on acute hospitals .
9 They also warned against the cumulative effect that any US reforms might have on future profitability .
10 We believe the need to consider the impact that refusing to permit minerals applications might have on local economies is adequately covered by the requirement to demonstrate they are ‘ in the public interest ’ ( MPG6 , paragraph 63 ) .
11 We believe the need to consider the impact that refusing to permit minerals applications might have on local economies is adequately covered by the requirement to demonstrate they are ‘ in the public interest ’ ( MPG6 , paragraph 63 ) .
12 The greatest insecurity lingering in investors ' minds was the lack of effect the rate rises had on the dollar 's ascent and the inflationary implications this might have for European economies .
13 Such a restructuring of the education system is something that Warnock ( 1988 ) points to as being long overdue , but she makes only fleeting references to the implications that this might have for special needs .
14 In the interbank market , banks offer surplus deposits which they might have to other banks .
15 Occasionally a charge on a shield of arms , or the interpretation of a crest can be an important clue in the determination of seignorial affiliation , in linking two families with different names , or suggesting a hitherto unsuspected landholding , quite apart from the visual attraction an achievement might have as stained glass , stone carving or hatchment in the local church .
16 The demand curve DD tells us the marginal value product of labour , the extra benefit society could have from extra goods produced .
17 a fixed-term contract for one year or more entered into from 1 October 1980 can include an agreement in writing by you to exclude any claim that you may have for unfair dismissal , where your dismissal consists only of the expiry of the term ;
18 a fixed-term contract for one year or more entered into from 1 October 1980 can include an agreement in writing by you to exclude any claim that you may have for unfair dismissal , where your dismissal consists only of the expiry of the term ;
19 It will consider the implications that changes in the use of sporting rights may have on other users of land and those wishing to make new demands upon land in the countryside .
20 A major issue is how to balance the rights and needs of the dementia sufferer with the effect which they may have on other tenants .
21 Erm , the proposals there do , in fact , exceed the capital spend on new starts , and it will therefore need pruning erm , and the proposals that we suggested earlier was that , subject to any comments members may have on individual schemes that are here , and their views on them , we would propose looking at the programme in detail , and bringing it within the guideline figures that have been set , erm , and doing that with the advice of P A G before it goes on to Policy Panel and , and Policy and Resources Committee .
22 This is followed by an a view of the impact multimedia may have on traditional information industry sectors such as print-on-paper publishing , bookselling and library services .
23 The study also specifically addresses the impact multimedia information products may have on traditional information sectors such as library services , publishing and bookselling so may be of interest to readers active in these areas .
24 However , the influence that sexual hormones per se may have on fundic argyrophil cell proliferation is unknown .
25 Non-monetarists also recognise the role that monetary changes may have on real output , though of course they do not assign them such a major role as the monetarists .
26 APACHE II scores on admission to ICUs can not be used for comparison of performances of ICUs as they fail to take into account the influences that management prior to ICU admission , such as stabilisation in an operating theatre or ward , may have on physiological variables .
27 I will be grateful for any information you may have on private home care cooperative .
28 The foregoing indemnities shall be in addition to any rights that any Indemnified Person may have at common law or otherwise and shall remain in full force and effect not withstanding KPMG 's engagement hereunder may be terminated .
29 Whatever disadvantage teenagers and adults may have with new languages , they have abilities which infants , for all their daunting ease of acquisition , lack .
30 Of course , it is necessary to assume that the questions , however they are phrased , are understood in the same way by all respondents whatever differences they may have in other respects , such as level of education or gender .
  Next page