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

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1 During her visit reporters noted that Hills raised almost every trade complaint which the USA had against Japan , including market entry restrictions , discrimination against foreigners in certain service sectors and an insufficient use by the government of anti-monopoly laws against construction companies involved in cartels and bid-rigging .
2 But every health-care system is facing similar pressures and the need to improve efficiency is important , without sacrificing equity and free access , which the NHS has in larger measure than most other health care systems ( Le Grand , 1989b ) .
3 The kind of planning which the FBI had in mind — ‘ indicative planning ’ involving the gathering and exchange of information on the development of the economy and the improvement of co-ordination , rather than the formulation and compulsory implementation of a central plan — had already been attempted under the Tories with the formation of the National Economic Development Council ( NEDC ) in 1962 but had effectively remained subordinated to conventional stop-go demand management practice : Labour promised a form of planning which would be ‘ purposeful ’ and ‘ effective ’ , which would ‘ have teeth in it somewhere ’ ( Budd , 1978 , Chapter 6 ) .
4 These fears have been partly generated by the substantial representation which the DES has on both tiers of NAB .
5 The interest which the Ojibwa have in squirrels is therefore really an interest in a kind of tree ’ ( 1966 , p. 60 ) .
6 The interest which the RUC has as a police force derives entirely from the social context in which it operates , but this context is both a spur and a hindrance to research on the RUC .
7 COULD you tell what the BBC has against rugby union ?
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