Example sentences of "of [det] [noun pl] have [pos pn] " in BNC.

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1 In this connection , central government and LEAs were urged to be sensitive to the wishes of some groups to have their daughters educated in single-sex schools .
2 ‘ The DUC operated as a kind of umbrella organization and there was a little group in all the different localities where uranium prospecting was going on … and each of these groups had their own little committee of two or three people who were feeding back information to the DUC and it was a real grassroots organization then . ’
3 Each of these locations has its own set of accounts .
4 The parents and teachers of many of these youngsters have their hands full enough just looking after them .
5 For most of these programmes there is more than one possible contact and each of these contacts has its advantages .
6 Each of these communities had its own head , who assumed most of the duties and rights of the head of an orthodox and separate school .
7 Each of these versions has its own authenticity ; and editorial decisions are interesting in their own right ( and merit investigation ) for what they tell us about the times when they were made ( for example , the Tutuola revisions tell us about British attitudes during the 1960s to the English of non-native speakers ) .
8 Each of these weeks has its own theme , rather like a signpost leading to the next part of the route .
9 Each of these parts has its own fireplace .
10 Each of these aspects has its place as a foundation for faith , though the church 's part is not so much essential to faith as an expression of faith .
11 Each of these trees has its own , unique " genetic formula " , the numerical values of its nine genes .
12 Each of these parks has its own appeal ; Skaftafell and Mývatn are favourites , while Þingvellir is historically important .
13 Each of these constables has his own separate patch , so that Easton 's built-up areas are divided into nine beats .
14 All of these lists have their problems .
15 Each of these methods has its own strengths and weaknesses and no single approach is perfect .
16 Yet , just so — indeed , because humans are fallible , the history of all religions has its dark side .
17 For this disanalogy arose from another : Darwin 's natural selection as a lawn process was complex , being compounded from heredity , variation and superfecundity , each of those processes having its own laws ; while Newton 's gravitational force was not compound and had a single law of its own .
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