Example sentences of "have [art] [noun] it " in BNC.

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1 With a poem , it is worth spending time thinking about why it has the title it has .
2 THE European Community has the parliament it deserves .
3 As Tory backbenchers cheered , the Chancellor said : ‘ British business now has the opportunity it has been looking for — to bring the country out of recession , to increase sales , expand production and invest for the future .
4 However , even if the bureau has the typeface it may well not appear on the output due to the vagaries of Apple 's font numbering system .
5 This is against all the evidence , but it is a compelling image , and one that clearly derives from this present age in our history , which now has the Shakespeare it deserves : an old , sex-obsessed vagrant in the Forest of Dean , refusing to pay his Poll Tax .
6 According to the hylemorphic theory of the scholastics , each individual thing or substance is a combination of ‘ matter ’ ( hyle ) and ‘ form ’ ( morphe ) , and it is because something has the form it has , that it is the kind of thing it is .
7 If you say ‘ one has an obligation to obey any law which does not violate fundamental human rights ’ you have denied that the law has the authority it claims for itself .
8 The membership issue now has the profile it deserves and demands at Table , Area and National levels and this must be continued .
9 At its simplest , associationism is the theory that a mental content has the meaning it does because of the things that tend to follow , or precede , it into the mind .
10 still come down to a a ratio that has no units it 's just a a number .
11 If it has no arguments it simply terminates .
12 And if Aherne has a criticism it is on the standards of school and club coaching .
13 If the encyclopaedia has a weakness it is that it sits on the fence on controversial issues .
14 Well we had a r a sch classroom in the infants school there for our headquarters and er storing cos we used to make use , we had a palliasse on the floor for when we was on night duty erm but I can never understand why we had our he headquarters over there but we had to do guard duties over in the elementary school on th school on the other side because that was the only one that had got a telephone and we had to man the telephones from the Brigade Headquarters or the to be able to phone to should they want us to be called out and so we had to do the guard duty over there but we slept in the , when we was off duty we was in er Alma Green School and that was there and then the we moved from there eventually and th th the longest part of our life of the Home Guard , the headquarters was at the cottage , I 've been trying to think what the name of the cottage is , it ha it , it has a name it 's the cottage next door to the Sir Robert Peel public house in Bell Lane .
15 Yes it has a lot it has a lot less on it , things like ..
16 Everybody has More or less has a paper It 's not like the Scotsman or the News , as regards numbers , but then you 've got all the local news and you got all the local advertisements .
17 But if the exhibition has a theme it is to do with disharmony , loss of control , shifting understandings .
18 Every time she has a birthday it will bring back memories .
19 Or if somebody has a premiere it means it 's the first time that they do something .
20 When the text has a reader it ceases to be a mere object and takes on anthropomorphic form ; it has a voice or voices ( the ‘ codes ’ ) , it creates its own history ( the history of the already-read content ) , it ‘ plays ’ , ‘ creates ’ , ‘ lies ’ , etc .
21 ‘ The nice thing about keeping it small and knowing each other well is that it 's very flexible ; if one of us has an emergency it does n't create problems or ill-feeling . ’
22 Black Swan ( past master of this genre ) has an offering it is very excited about , Kathleen Rowntree 's Between Friends , but it is not a patch on its Wesley , Trollope and Sutherland ladies — a shame .
23 Thanks Dick I says to him , taking it from him and passing the bottle , perhaps I will , I 'd no idea it might be valuable , I just like copper and brass bits and pieces .
24 ‘ Heaven knows , when I agreed to this I 'd no idea it would cause such anger — ’ She gave Peter a reproachful glance .
25 He he goes I 'd no idea it was so hard .
26 AFTER the photographers were ushered out of the Cabinet Room yesterday morning , John Major 's first words to his colleagues were ‘ welcome back ’ — a suitably downbeat successor to ‘ well , who 'd a thought it ? ’ , his icebreaker after Mrs Thatcher 's downfall .
27 It need not , however , have had the significance it acquired in tenth-century documents when it did come to express claims to a kingship of all Anglo-Saxons .
28 If she 'd had the abortion it would have given us time to do that sort of thing .
29 Until the very last minute I had had no idea it could happen .
30 If she and Lowell had had a child it would have been a strange hybrid , perhaps difficult to love .
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