Example sentences of "[conj] have [verb] [adv prt] of the " in BNC.
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1 | Control children who were found to have died or to have moved out of the study area before their matched case had cancer diagnosed were replaced . |
2 | On the evening of Thursday 1 August , The Royal Academy will open its doors for Country Living readers to view the exhibition that has become on of the highlights of the London Season . |
3 | The other lesson that has come out of the work within the RAF and from the work done outside is that expert systems in particular , but AI in general will not come about as stand-alone , independent systems , but will be embedded or connected to existing or planned conventional computing . |
4 | A genre that had grown out of the need for sensationalism did seem to be striking chords at a time of economic insecurity when cities seemed places of dislocation and when , if nothing else , there was a curiosity about how law-breakers operated . |
5 | Adam remembered the BMW that had pulled out of the complex when he walked past earlier . |
6 | Throughout these crucial years of twentieth-century growth , the many colonial countries that had provided so many natural and human resources for the Western machine began to demand an independence of their own , fired by the very principles of democracy that had sprung out of the Enlightenment and inspired the French and American revolutions . |
7 | Peace News reported on the revolt against the ‘ multiversity ’ at the symbol of liberal corporate America , the Berkeley campus within the University of California ; it reported on the growing movement that had sprung out of the deep south civil rights campaign . |
8 | Instead , he concentrated on a bit of good news that had come out of the Munich mess . |
9 | The empiricism that had come out of the 19th century as the dominant intellectual mode had been twisted to the right , so to speak , by the ‘ white emigration ’ from Europe . |
10 | This led to the collapse in many universities of not only traditional moral theories but also many of the great idealistic philosophies ( such as Kant 's , for example ) that had come out of the Enlightenment itself . |
11 | The only positive thing that had come out of the conversation had been Nicole 's offer of some aspirin . |
12 | Belinda flinched as she saw who it was that had come out of the lift and addressed her . |
13 | Perhaps there are also genes that have broken out of the sperm/egg ‘ proper channels ’ altogether and pioneered a sideways route . |
14 | We are concerned here with the more recent debates that have used the inner city as a central organising theme , debates that have grown out of the economic boom years of the second half of the 1980s in many of the richest economies in the world . |
15 | Among the mass of contradictory claims that have come out of the discovery , Climber has tried to piece together what is known and what is purely speculation in a mystery that is unlikely ever to be solved . |
16 | The positive things that have come out of the divorce are that I have a much better relationship with my children and I can read a book in bed and not have a jealous partner by my side trying to prevent me . |
17 | What we 'll be doing is er organising an exhibition which will come on stream at the museum in the middle of February , and will run until June , and that exhibition will include you know , er all , well , some of the material that , that 's been recorded , such as the , you know , the aural history tapes , er some of perhaps the , the press cuttings and things that have come out of the motorway . |
18 | There 's a group that 's come out of the closet and swaps clothes , |
19 | He had proposed the visit to Burford on 17 May 1968 but had dropped out of the ill-fated return journey . |