Example sentences of "it have [to-vb] with " in BNC.
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1 | Which is a shame , because in its proper place — and of course it has to coexist with the need for supportiveness and respect — it is just a game . |
2 | Certainly , any academic who wants to write a book on a canonical author , topic , or period , is likely to get a contract without very much formality ( particularly if it has to do with ‘ women ’ or ‘ theory ’ , or ideally both ) . |
3 | In short , what this has to do with modern poetry is very clear ; what it has to do with modern criticism is not clear at all , since that criticism has , as we have seen , no vocabulary for dealing with it , and moves further and further from finding such a vocabulary , the more it takes its lead from linguisticians like Saussure and Jakobson . |
4 | It has to do with inverting elements of this world , re-combining its constitutive features . ’ |
5 | It has to do with land as well as landscape , and the right to farm in a time-honoured way . ’ |
6 | We must conclude , therefore , that the duty to support just institutions , where it has to do with just authorities , is parasitical on the normal justification thesis , and not an alternative to it . |
7 | It has to do with music . |
8 | There is another potential drawback ; it has to do with the fluent child 's love of ( or abuse of ) debate . |
9 | Nothing illustrates better the fluidity of viewpoints by which we can swing towards and away from egoism , and how little it has to do with morality . |
10 | It has to do with the relationship between individual initiative and conventional constraint , with the limits social conditions put on the freedom of thought and action . |
11 | It has to do with not knowing what is going on . |
12 | It has to do with not knowing what is going on |
13 | ‘ It has to do with what was said last time I was here . ’ |
14 | ‘ It has to do with working out my relationship with my son [ Jack , aged eight , lives in London — Roth and the mother of his child have split up but remain on good terms ] . |
15 | It has to do with the perfect fusion of many things : the refinement and effortless muscularity of the six-cylinder and V8 engines ; the harmonious balance of the springing and damping ; the flawless construction ; the quality of interior appointments ; the strength of the body shell ; the grace of the body line . |
16 | I think part of it has to do with recognition — I remember listening to my own grandmother 's mysterious pronouncements — and part with a renewed sense of the strangeness of it . |
17 | It is possible that it has to do with cannibalism . |
18 | As height is genetically determined , it is difficult to see what it has to do with an acquired goal of achievement , except where parents or teachers convince tall children that they are achievers . |
19 | It has to do with the underfunding of the Ministero per i Beni Culturali , the ministry for the heritage and arts , which receives only 0.19% of the national budget . |
20 | It has to do with short-term planning and public accounting systems , which mean that , although money can in theory be voted for projects over a number of years , in practice , it usually arrives in annual dribs and drabs . |
21 | It has to do with the pervasive corruption in public life , now at last being revealed in Milan , which favours large , one-off projects over mere maintenance because they allow more opportunities for douceurs . |
22 | It has to do with Italy 's terrifying national public deficit , estimated at L 34,000 billion , which on 26 May led to the money voted by Parliament at the end of January being frozen until October ; this means , for example , that Venice , Italy 's most fragile urban and artistic organism , which was to have had L450 billion spent on its infrastructure this year , is once again unable , for example , to dredge its canals , essential if the city is to avoid being flooded next time there is a high tide . |
23 | It has to do with certain kinds of knowledge , which allows the adaptation of means to ends . |
24 | All our reforms of administration might be reforms on the moon for all it has to do with them . " |
25 | In terms of the example it has to do with the fact that if in the situation there existed only the one circumstance for the starting of the wipers , then , even if certain other events or conditions had occurred or existed , the wipers would not have started . |
26 | It has to do with general properties , certainly , but also it has to do with ranges of them . |
27 | It has to do with general properties , certainly , but also it has to do with ranges of them . |
28 | It has to do with ‘ the people ’ ( but who are they ? ) , though often this has the sense of the vulgus , the common people , and to describe something as ‘ popular ’ may then have the ( depreciatory ) implication that it is inferior or designed to suit low tastes . |
29 | Partly this is the result of the shapely overall curve of the A melody ; partly , perhaps , it has to do with the way a certain simple ( ‘ innocent ’ ? ) pentatonic inflection ( the melody of section A is based entirely on D E F£ A B , apart from a solitary G in bar 6 and the cadence in bar 15 ) rubs against the ‘ romantic ’ harmonies , diatonic with rich chromatic alterations . |
30 | Almost everyone in England and Wales is aware that the penal system is in ‘ crisis ’ , even people who have little idea of what ‘ the penal system ’ is , except that it has to do with prisons and punishment . |