Example sentences of "has be [verb] that [pers pn] " in BNC.

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1 If the work is commissioned by a PR consultant , the — copyright is his unless it has been arranged that it should be assigned to the client .
2 So much of his work has been lost that it is difficult to appreciate its impact , but with the backing of the ambitious mayor , Edmund Lockyer , he extensively transformed both Plymouth itself and its satellite towns of Stonehouse and Devonport .
3 The Commission has been instructed that it does not have to follow a uniform pattern throughout the country and therefore we may see still greater diversity over time as , in one shire , we see the county council survive and in another the district councils .
4 The man schooled to regard policy questions in technical terms and to see controversial matters of principle in terms of party management has been learning that he is a Tory .
5 But much of his work was done in minor cricket , and , for instance , in the seasons 1848–51 it has been calculated that he took no less than 1,307 wickets , including 455 in forty-one matches in 1851 .
6 The people are very tolerant and it has been overheard that I speak better Portuguese than I do English .
7 Regional Railways has been assured that they will knock 16 minutes off the journey between Redditch and Lichfield in the West Midlands .
8 Regional Railways has been assured that they will knock 16 minutes off the journey between Redditch and Lichfield in the West Midlands .
9 Where training programmes are geared to the needs of older workers it has been demonstrated that they can successfully acquire new skills .
10 The Government should halt the issue of licences to build further gas-powered stations until it has been demonstrated that they do produce cheaper electricity .
11 Once it has been accepted that they need continuing care their responsibility for maintaining themselves is removed .
12 It has been argued that they derived their name from that of Kenchester , which is identified as the Magnis of both the Antonine Itinerary and the Ravenna list , suggesting some tradition of local continuity , but there remain serious problems with this suggested derivation .
13 Rather than seeing the electorate as independent and politically minded , it has been argued that they were easily susceptible to manipulation from above , and that they tended to defer to the wishes of their social superiors .
14 Under SSAP 24 and UITF 6 these long-term obligations are accounted for on a full provision basis , even though in many cases it is likely that they will continually roll over , and it has been argued that it is difficult to justify a prohibition , as SSAP 15 would otherwise require , on the related deferred tax being treated on a similar basis if it , too , continually rolls over .
15 Under SSAP 24 and UITF 6 these long-term obligations are accounted for on a full provision basis , even though in many cases it is likely that they will continually roll over ( ie as one obligation is settled another will arise ) and it has been argued that it is difficult to justify a prohibition , as SSAP 15 would otherwise require , on the related deferred tax being treated on a similar basis if it , too , continually rolls over .
16 It has been argued that it is wrong for such a body to impose even a limited check on the activities of an elected Government .
17 It has been argued that it covers not only fairness , in the sense of fairness to the accused , but also in the sense of ensuring that , in the eyes of the public , the highest standards of justice are upheld and it appears to the world at large that the accused is getting a fair trial .
18 It has been argued that it is the individual not the institution who is creative and that the schools can only adopt the ideas of individuals .
19 It has been argued that it did not actually initiate any changes in the mental health field , rather it endorsed the developments that were already taking place within hospitals and in the community .
20 It has been argued that it would make sense for whoever runs the train services to also take responsibility for the track .
21 Moreover , it has been argued that he ought to be responsible for guests or licensees on his land .
22 It has been argued that you can identify a person 's class according to his dress , manner of speech , address , attitude to education , leisure habits etc .
23 It has been said that they show up as a striking pair with powers of × 12 or more .
24 It has been said that we can regard ATP as a common currency which must be spent to provide energy whenever it is needed — to drive chemical reactions , to cause muscles to contract , or to pump substances across membranes .
25 It has been said that it is best not to know too much about salami and other sausages , in the same way that ignorance about haggis aids its enjoyment and easy digestion .
26 It has been said that it is unsporting to receive help from another angler when you catch a fish .
27 It has been said that he understood the psychology of an orchestra better than almost any other conductor .
28 It has been said that he gave too much of himself in his idealistic way , and that the ‘ political football ’ aspects of the CBC in eastern Canada , where he was finally transferred , caused a breakdown in health and his early retirement .
29 It has been said that he provided no leadership and lacked control of the episcopate , and it is clear that he waited on events in 1326–7 , only casting his lot with Isabella and Mortimer when the king 's cause was obviously lost .
30 If A had an honest doubt whether there was a contract at all between B and C it has been held that this would provide a good defence but if the doubt is whether A 's rights or C's under two inconsistent agreements should prevail and A chooses to adopt a course which on one view of the law will undoubtedly interfere with C 's rights , it has been said that he must at least show that he was advised and honestly believed that he was entitled to take that course .
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