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

  Next page
No Sentence
1 Nevertheless , the problem of average teacher costs strikes hard in rural areas that have many small schools .
2 The northern flanks of the London-Brabant Massif contain hydrocarbon potential in Palaeozoic reservoirs that have yet to be tested .
3 The oldest tavern is the Vlissinghe , of which mention was first made in 1552 , but there are hundreds of little bars and cafes , many of them housed in olde-worlde buildings that have the Americans squealing with delight .
4 This occurs in cold climates that have heavy snowfalls during the winter .
5 Against this background of recent dramatic change in retail patterns that have remained town-based for centuries , the new guidance is welcome .
6 According to this view , short-termism is a feature of investments in firm-specific assets that have a low resale value outside the firm .
7 Many of them will derive from weaknesses in existing policies that have been recognized within the department , and that administrators are striving to correct .
8 With the end of the season in sight it is always worthwhile looking at the trends in diving accidents that have occurred .
9 They are there to see in various books that have been published ; I suppose it is sad that they have n't been seen by a wider opera-going public .
10 In the least advanced countries , such differences may be only moderate , but in developing countries that have experienced an important degree of modernization , there may be considerable variation .
11 Not only are numbers increasing every year but most students qualify in universities and polytechnics , whereas in other countries that have similar numbers entering higher education there is a much higher wastage rate .
12 Students have their courses to follow , courses which are often set in disciplinary frameworks that have little or nothing , on the surface , to do with society .
13 And we may not be able to rejoice in certain things that have happened in our past .
14 In a bureaucracy such as a pollution control agency , the organizing principle is administrative efficiency — ‘ an orientation to the expeditious attainment of the given objectives ’ ( Blau , 1963 : 264 ) — which reaches down to the field officer in the form of a number of imperatives about getting the job done in certain ways that have profound implications for his exercise of discretion .
15 There are a considerable number of straightforward investments available in reputable havens that have no direct equivalent in mainland UK .
16 Wagamama is a smoke-free zone , whereas Belgo sells untipped Tigre gaspers in cute packets that have n't changed since the Fifties .
  Next page