Example sentences of "to do with [noun] in the " in BNC.

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1 This is partly because what might be called laws-of-war issues — to do with legitimacy in the use of force , proportionality , restraint and so on — invariably lurk in the shadows of all discussions about nuclear weaponry , and would inevitably return to haunt those who cavalierly denied the importance of such issues .
2 Currently one of the most viable theories is that psychosis has something to do with peculiarities in the functioning of the two brain hemispheres .
3 We may well endorse the saying regarding him who had so much to do with road-making in the Highlands and islands ; ‘ if you had seen these roads before they were made you would have blessed brave General Wade , ’ and wish prosperity to the Highland Railway Company .
4 Many innovations have more to do with changes in the value systems of the individuals concerned than with the acquisition of wholly new skills .
5 Then there will be some days when nothing seems to resolve and so I always forget those days and do something else completely — I am sure it must be something to do with electricity in the air . ’
6 So wh I mean it 's all to do with behaviourism in the sense that , rather than being concerned with the mechanisms that iner er what 's the word ?
7 It has nothing to do with self-centredness in the sense of moral immaturity .
8 Crompton and Jones disagree that class consists only of people , and has nothing to do with places in the stratification system .
9 Harvey 's group , for example , found that peeling paint in the home related to lower IQ , but that it was nothing to do with lead in the paint , relating more probably to the influence of the parents .
10 Rufus wondered if he might have invented that part because he had so much to do with wombs in the course of his own daily life .
11 It 's all to do with language in the nineteen nineties Jean .
12 And erm it 's all to do with language in the nineteen nineties to go to be transcribed for posterity and used to see the change and development of languages
13 ‘ It 's to do with people in the two paramilitary organisations fleecing small and medium sized businessmen to line their own pockets and buy good cars and have holidays . ’
14 As strange as it sounds , the great popularity of Hitler already before the war had for the most part little to do with fanatical belief in the central tenets of the Hitlerian racial-imperialist ‘ world-view ’ , and even less to do with belief in the Party , whose leader he was .
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