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

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1 It is not appropriate here to analyse , nor even to state , the many reasons for this difficulty , but after scrutinising the research findings I have to say that LEAs have on the whole not seen the implications of the 1981 Act for social services departments or district health authorities .
2 What news will Chancellor Norman Lamont have for the motorist when he rises in the House of Commons next Tuesday to deliver his budget speech ?
3 She suspects that Charles suspects that she had once had an affair with Ivan , but of course she had not , though she concedes that Ivan is so unpleasant that only a degree of past sexual intimacy could plausibly explain the kind of relationship that he and Liz have over the years established .
4 What are essentially bilateral relationships between group and department in Britain have in the United States long become recognized as trilateral relationships of group , department and , because of its far greater role in the substance of legislation , Congress .
5 The excavations of villas in Britain have in the past concentrated on the living quarters and almost entirely ignored the farmyards , barns and byres .
6 It is a vision that the citizens of Manchester have for the city 's future and their region . ’
7 This influences the expectations that the public in Easton have of the police , and of their role in the community — a point which one constable made by explaining that one resident in Easton , upon finding himself locked out of his home , called at the station asking for the duplicate set of keys to his house which he thought the police would routinely possess for the residents ' benefit ; phone calls from the public asking for air and train information also sometimes occur .
8 Therefore , the opinion ordinary law-abiding residents in Easton have of the police is good , as one elderly lady without prompting told the researcher : ‘ Easton police always give a very good service .
9 The French pied lowland cattle , like those of the Netherlands and other parts of northern Europe have on the whole been more successful than the Bretons and are mainly dual-purpose breeds of composite origins .
10 I fully understand that and I recognise the justifiable pride which people in Grampian have in the services provided and in the developments which have taken place in conjunction with the medical school .
11 ‘ The Geophysical Observatory in Port Moresby have over the years provided us with very useful earthquake data and are helping us monitor the after shocks which are sill being felt in the Tari area . ’
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