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

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1 Even then , Terry and I used to have arguments when one of us discovered that Gary had knowledge of things that only the two of us knew .
2 Space-fleet 's personal RIT devices were supposed to be unjammable up to a range of two kilometres , but it was obvious that Spinward had technology in the Arcadia system that outclassed Space-fleet 's latest equipment .
3 Pluralism presupposes that groups have access to the decision-making process and that power is widely spread .
4 It was then suggested that MCC had similarities to ‘ a Catherine wheel turning at ever increasing speeds … whose final whirl could end with a bang ( i.e. Robert Maxwell proclaiming the triumph of a clean balance sheet ) or a splutter ’ .
5 It was here that Schellenberg had trouble with his map and then-they had a stroke of luck , a sign at the side of the road outside the village of St Aubin that said 12th Parachute Detachment .
6 Now that Phoenix has buildings without an owner , and Kuwait has owners without a building , a new link has been forged .
7 Sage , rosemary and lavender need no visual description , though it is not always realized that sage has spikes of vividly blue-mauve flowers which last a long time and are highly magnetic to bees .
8 For each item , the children either had to complete a sentence , such as Snoopy has cream on his face so … or they were given a description of the clue , such as The clue is that Snoopy has cream on his face , and were asked to tell the Pink Panther about the clue and what they had worked out .
9 A more interesting survey is the one by Durex , which reveals that Lancastrians have sex on average 77 times a year — which astonishingly makes them top of the league .
10 Again , the point of this is to suggest that words have possibilities beyond what their ‘ standard ’ definitions and common uses suggest .
11 Moreover , it is not clear that this pattern of results is what would be predicted on the assumption that subjects had schemas for situations previously available .
12 It is important that recruits have experience of living away from their home area and that they are independent people capable of making their own decisions .
13 PC Week quotes Microsoft 's vice president , systems strategy John Lazarus as saying that IBM has rights under a previously secret codicil in their settlement last month to port NT to the RS/6000 : Microsoft is encouraging them to do it .
14 The other approach has been to argue that rats have difficulty with passive avoidance because they can not remember recent events .
15 The living room ceiling was hung with bunting , the kitchen smelt of roast turkey , the house was full of people who all knew each other intimately , the videos had been ordered and the sideboard was laden with drink and in fact everyone behaved just like it was a real family Christmas , except that Boy had sex with two other men in the bathroom , and they did n't even bother to lock the door because they knew that no one else there would mind , knew that they did n't have to hide what they were doing from the rest of the party .
16 That becomes clearer , if , fourthly , we notice that ideas have meaning for social actors .
17 Virtually every other country in Europe does it , Canada and America do it — fines in America are $5,000 , and in Canada the penalty is $3,000 — because all countries recognise that airlines have responsibility in that matter .
18 The answers emphasise that businesses have difficulties with more than bank loans and unpaid debts .
19 Our concern is not the actual refusal rate but to ensure that families have choice on the basis of informed consent .
20 Sources claimed that China had reservations about a possible expansion of the number of directly elected members of the Legislative Assembly , but more importantly that greater democratic reform in Macao might encourage similar moves in Hong Kong [ see pp. 37672-73 ] .
21 This is not as mystical as it may sound , for it means that Christ has priority over our lives , our careers , our relationships , and over the meaning of our identities .
22 It is true that people had loyalties to the old counties , many of which were abolished by the Conservatives in 1974 , but people do have regional identities .
23 Now this is an appalling situation , er th the B C C I 's books were certified by the auditors as a true and fair record from December nineteenth er December thirty first nineteen er eighty seven forward a and that meant that people had confidence in B C C I , here we 're told that the auditors are giving it er a certificate of a a true and fair record er encouraging therefore people to in t to invest and yet prior to nineteen eighty nine Price Waterhouse knew of gross irregularities er in B C C I 's handling of loads , particularly the load to C C A H which was the holding company for First American er bank shares .
24 So , we 'll forget all that , and we 'll just assume that what Freud really meant , was that people have sense of guilt because they 've been socialized to have it .
25 Erm , it , what it struck me as is a parallel with Freud 's idea of transference , you know that once something happens in the , in the traumatic period in a , in a childhood , there 's then a tendency to transference to occur later in life , we recreate later in relationships to er the model of the early one and er it struck me that what you said about French industrial relations sounded a bit like transference in erm in the psychoanalysis the idea that i i it spills out as it were from the initial which might have been saved er within the family to other relationships i in later life that people have with their superiors at work or something I mean you can see this actually sometimes you know that people have relationships with their superiors which are clearly erm based on erm their relationships with their parents and they see the , th their boss as a parental figure and the employee sees themselves as er as , as , as a kind of erm child and it shows itself sometimes in quite er quite unmistakable ways .
26 Monetary policy is only likely to be effective , therefore , if the government can ‘ sell ’ it to the people , so that people have confidence in its effectiveness .
27 But I think there 's also the other end of the scale which is , which is what , you 've slightly amended this year , is the fact of elderly people erm , I know recently that myself have gone through the fact of my gran had er , was going through a very sick period , and if she 'd have come back home , it would have been very difficult for me to have had to look after her at the same time as trying to attend my council duties , and this would have been the same for my dad , and the additional income which this would have brought , to have paid someone to be able to look after her whilst we were at council meetings , and you can remember that these meetings sometimes go on , you can say well , this meeting should be over by one o'clock then it goes on till three o'clock or whatever , and then peop , the problems mount up for that person left on their own , and I think that those things have to be taken into consideration , and I believe that this is the first step forward in trying to recognise that people have responsibilities outside of the council chamber .
28 It would be quite wrong to accept Thomas Walsingham 's opinion that Gaunt had designs on the crown himself .
29 Rumours that Gaunt had designs on the crown were flying about , and it was alleged that he was a changeling , a butcher 's son , substituted for the queen 's own son who had been smothered at birth .
30 During the first half of the century efforts were made to extend the same technique to the various kinds of animals as well as plants , so that naturalists had access to a vast body of information about the geographical distribution of living things .
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