Example sentences of "have [prep] [art] [adj] " in BNC.

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1 Can I have for a long time .
2 This study will focus on the informal uses of parks , farmland and waste land and the amenity values these areas may have for the general public .
3 Now , now you did mention it , it is going to be an enormous country now , what implications does that have for the European Community ?
4 That special type of case was broadly one where the acts of an intruder , however continuous and far-reaching , did not substantially interfere with any plans which the owners might have for the future use of undeveloped land …
5 What shall we have for the postal one .
6 Dennis Sciama , of the Institute for Theoretical Physics in Trieste , teased out the consequences the neutrinos could have for the dark-matter debate in a journal , Nature , a week before the conference .
7 What relevance does this have for the social scientist ?
8 Similarly , detailed knowledge of bee physiology should enable one to predict that the bees ' locating a food source will have as a causal consequence ( even if only statistically ) the subsequent pattern of wiggles and tilts in the hive .
9 The approach that I have called theoretical as opposed to practical must have as a major part of its aim not merely the passing on of facts and formulae but the inculcation of critical and speculative habit .
10 Services should have as a primary goal the alleviation of distress , by providing a programme of treatment , care and support based on the unique needs of an individual .
11 Which former prime minister 's surname does Teddy Taylor have as a middle name ?
12 What did the Americans have as the main part of a thanksgiving dinner ?
13 The fundamental issue is this that if the Labour Party is to remain a party of labour it must have as an integral part the trade union movement , it 's as simple as that , colleagues !
14 President Yeltsin , as he made clear outside No. 10 Downing street , understands that the position of a super-power which has 30,000 nuclear weapons is different from the position of the United Kingdom which will have as an absolute maximum only 128 warheads per submarine .
15 This simple fact deprives you of most of the information you would normally have about the other person .
16 I understand the concerns that people will have about the forthcoming changes , not least because I have seen similar exercises in IBM .
17 What concept does the school have of a multiracial society ?
18 Any minority group is likely to include a substantial number of people who feel the need of … help and reassurance , … and many members of ethnic minorities suffer an additional persistent burden of racial discrimination which may well cause them to wonder what hope they could ever have of a fair hearing from a representative of the culture which treats them in this way …
19 It is difficult to see , however , what interests we might have of the necessary importance whose realisation depends on owning corporate property .
20 You 'd then maybe have like a little library .
21 And were they based on areas as well , did you have like a different gang for different streets sort of thing ?
22 He was glad that he did n't have along the customary Russian navigator which was the standard requirement for all private flights over Russian airspace .
23 Senator Crowninshield had been sympathetic to the problems a child might have with a famous parent .
24 I du n no but she could she could have with a special facility for
25 Waldheim 's delight at meeting Kohl was understandable , for the encounter was possibly the last he will have with a foreign leader before bowing out and slipping into retirement .
26 Could you have with a bad character , an actively hostile house ?
27 ‘ Where an unconstitutional change of regime takes place in a recognised state , governments of other states must necessarily consider what dealings , if any , they should have with the new regime , and whether and to what extent it qualifies to be treated as the government of the state concerned .
28 The final question Chairman , there 's a lot of er , facts here with no remarks against them under the premises and involvement like here on page three , number fifty nine , Mental Health Act , the National Assistance Act , Health and Safety at Work Act , it does n't tell us the type of premises or what in so I say , well what involvement do we have with the Mental Heath Act for example ?
29 However , for the prisoner , the CAB adviser is often the only non-establishment source of support and contact that he or she may have with the outside world .
30 What hope would she have with the local police when the issue came down to her word against Guido 's ?
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