Example sentences of "has [adv] [adv] [to-vb] " in BNC.

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1 At the same time the keyboard conductor makes sure that the electrostatic charge that builds up inside you also has somewhere else to go .
2 TO MANY she 's still the chirpy Cockney who made it on her looks and has little else to offer .
3 What Dunadd has most provocatively to offer is a hollowed out bowl in one slab of rock , accompanied by carvings of a boar , the outline of a footprint , and several lines of ogam inscription .
4 of the posts identified , but , even though it has done very well , it has somewhat further to go .
5 The Egyptian foreign minister , Amr Moussa , made it clear he expected Israel to offer more than it has so far to return the deportees to their homes in the occupied territories .
6 This is not merely the result of changes in fashion that inevitably occur in the social sciences , but has perhaps more to do with the observed failures of alternative social and economic arrangements .
7 He has just enough to buy his materials , to live , to have a working holiday every year , to manage .
8 The ARFU 's decision has still yet to sink in with many rugby traditionalists but Channel Ten displayed instant commitment to their new deal when they televised the tickertape parade live throughout Australia .
9 Much of the singing has also still to settle .
10 As the mysterious man following Blackeyes , Nigel Planer speaks at last , though he has damn all to say .
11 The influence remains dominant even when it becomes clear that the ill-health of many people has often more to do with the context of their lives and factors such as poverty , lack of access to land and food security , sanitation and employment .
12 It may be that TNC proposals will raise standards by increased accountability ; but I remain convinced that the creation of a true teacher-parent partnership has even more to contribute .
13 Raskolnikov is young , preoccupied and merely puzzled — ‘ young , abstract and therefore cruel ’ , the severe voice of the novel descries him elsewhere — but the reader attends in tragic wonder , for he understands that Marmeladov has indeed nowhere to go , a nowhere which is the finality of his loose end , at once in character , at once personal to the selfish selfless rationale of one man 's marriage and his other circumstances , personal to his ‘ destitution ’ or ‘ extremity ’ or ‘ misère ’ ( nishcheta , which he is careful to distinguish from his poverty ) , and at the same time an objective and transpersonal theme running through all Dostoevsky 's work .
14 It 's her home , and she has nowhere else to live .
15 It was now clear that this was because an atom in its ground state has nowhere else to go , unless it can be given the rather large amount of energy necessary to lift it to an excited state with n greater than I.
16 ‘ She says she has nowhere else to go .
17 He is about sixty and they should have retired him years ago , but he has nowhere else to go .
18 The rain has no where to go , it 'll flood .
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