Example sentences of "have [verb] with " in BNC.

  Next page
No Sentence
1 It is the same principle as the female body receiving the male sperm , and , after it has conjoined with the egg , nourishing it and gestating it so that its form can grow from fundamental simplicity to the complexity of a human body .
2 A particularly dangerous trap in analysis has developed with the increasing use of computers in data analysis .
3 Not surprisingly these measures have been controversial , and a central-local battle has developed with a strong party political character .
4 Tourism has developed with considerable speed into one of the major industries of the modern world , and much of its current shape and nature is the result of British innovation during the past 150 years .
5 This aspect has developed with the increase in the availability of software .
6 Since then , however , Scotland 's forward play , under the benevolent eye of Richie Dixon , has developed with pleasing continuity , particularly at the lineout , where in both the previous Five Nations games opposition machinations have been torn asunder rather like the post-war devastation in the Orson Welles screen classic .
7 Teresa , whose accounting section has to liaise with both of them , has already paid the balance on a Far Eastern round trip taking in Hong Kong , Bangkok , Singapore , Bali , Jakarta , Brunei and Penang .
8 In its future strategy St William 's has to liaise with many existing institutions and agencies , at higher or lower levels .
9 That group , now represented by Yuri Gekht 's Industrial Union , has broken with Mr Volsky 's lobby , ignoring calls for compromise at recent sessions of parliament and voting against Mr Yeltsin at every opportunity .
10 This is the second time in a fortnight the Chancellor has broken with the convention that he does not comment on interest-rate movements .
11 I think she 's somebody that just like , has to go with the flow , with what her friends are doing , and all her friends back home are really seriously into them .
12 He has to see with his own eyes that the object he takes to be a rough piece of hemp , destined to choke the life out of him , is in fact a string of priceless pearls .
13 They show how the market for solicitors ' work has altered with the development of criminal legal aid and the threat to established sources of income from divorce , conveyancing and personal injury claims .
14 Well er the I mean there has been a slight complexity with the replacement er programme of course because er er E F two thousand was originally envisaged that it would replace the phantoms er as as as as well as the jaguars and now that er has altered with the decision in options to er get rid of er the phantom squadrons , we 've er been able to adjust the replacement programme such that er the aircraft E F two thousand will replace er the erm er the jaguar and some of the F threes er and the programme will be adjusted such that we get er the most cost effective er mixture of replacement of those two types and there is no problem with keeping the jaguar going until that stage and it may well be it is , is being judged to be cheaper that we should er do some F three replacement at the same time , again partly for cost reasons because it 's gon na be more cost effective to do it that way .
15 He has travelled with the team to every country in Europe and his outstanding memory was Ireland 's victory in the European Helvetia Cup in Norway in 1981 .
16 Friend and photographer Howard Bingham has travelled with him for thirty years .
17 In answering this question , one has to contend with two muddles in English law , a general muddle about mental disorder and criminal responsibility , and a specific muddle about murder and manslaughter .
18 Ms Amanda Taylor , 29 , who took up the Lib Dem banner , also has to contend with an Official Liberal Party candidate , Mr Erbie Murat .
19 ‘ Ultimately , rock'n'roll has to contend with carrying the burden of primitive music on its shoulders , the way Atlas carried the world on his shoulders .
20 As well as the threat posed by Divine , HDMAC also has to contend with PALplus , an enhanced version of PAL .
21 Apart from the company it 's safer , because one really does n't know how many of the beggars one has to contend with . ’
22 But the lubricator is not the largest missing item the company has to contend with — there is no tender !
23 Defenders of the Wild : Sundays at 7pm. 12th , The Sting of Jose Truda Palazzo : Poachers and loggers are just two of the groups this Brazilian conservationist has to contend with .
24 However , the Soviet Union still has to contend with the need , perhaps more pressing than in most areas of the world , to keep a wary eye on Washington when considering its options in South and , since 1979 particularly , Central America .
25 In winter , skin has to contend with central heating and cold temperatures ; conditions which can cause even the oiliest of skin types to become dehydrated .
26 The real situation RE has to contend with is now very different from how many , perhaps most , people have generally thought it to be .
27 Hard on the heels of the furore about women priests it now has to contend with something equally knotty — the fatal British tendency to be kind to animals .
28 And she has taught with us now and then . ’
29 For some years Amnesty International has gazed with envy at those charities and voluntary organizations that have found it relatively easy to attract donations and sponsorship of events from companies .
30 This follows from the probable distinction between the Fort Ternan and Maboko/Nachola material : because the type species of Kenyapithecus is K. wickeri from Fort Ternan , the generic name Kenyapithecus has to remain with the Fort Ternan material and forms the root for the second tribe Kenyapithecini .
  Next page