Example sentences of "have [vb pp] be " in BNC.

  Next page
No Sentence
1 Perhaps he has just waited to see what was emerging and then stepped in quickly to take the initiative and carry forward the proposal which he has sensed is about to emerge .
2 So far all he has received are 100 free shares .
3 The legal advice an applicant has received is part of the evidence that a remedy .
4 ‘ The visitors ’ centre which the company has developed is now one of the most impressive and popular attractions of its kind in Northern Ireland , ’ he said .
5 By contrast , those still stone free nine months or more after dissolution treatment has stopped are genuinely likely to have had complete gall stone dissolution .
6 We do n't do any astronomy in this department , but we teach an elementary astronomy course , and astronomy of course now is just the physics of outer space ; astronomy has stopped being a separate subject .
7 HOLLYWOOD has stopped being the dream factory and instead become the poison factory , challenging conventional notions of decency , undermining the family , ridiculing religion and promoting contempt for authority .
8 Meanwhile , the kite that Lord Hanson has flown is bobbing around in the political and financial winds .
9 The time has wandered on to 11.15 pm and the only person that the august gathering has heard is the MC , but it is now time to introduce the first speaker , who needs little or no introduction .
10 Easily the largest component of the landfills he has examined is paper and board .
11 Er , I think Prince who , perhaps dealt with domestic politics , but one thing he has exposed is the green cause which I 'm very pleased about because I do n't think that the politicians in this country take these issues seriously enough !
12 When the Equal Opportunities Commission , in its equality agenda , describes child care facilities as meagre in the extreme compared with the facilities that are available in the rest of Europe , when we know that the women in work to whom the Minister has referred are often forced into part-time work because of inadequate child care arrangements and when we bear in mind his entirely complacent answer , is not it a good thing that a Labour Government are coming who will ensure that child care provision is expanded ?
13 First , all the groups to whom the hon. Gentleman has referred were hit much harder by the policies of high taxation and raging inflation over which the Labour Government presided .
14 What I confirmed in answer to the question to which the hon. Gentleman has referred was that we had put in place measures to deal with the problems arising from repossession .
15 The hon. Gentleman should bear in mind that each of the two cases to which he has referred was decided by the trial judge on the basis of medical evidence , including independent medical evidence .
16 The corrective that Mr Welch has prescribed is bold enough to suggest that his second decade as chief executive could be as radical as the first .
17 Antonia added : ‘ I think the reason he has resigned is because of the particular allegations which have just occurred . ’
18 When articulated in this way the Wilsonian social contract appears very close to what Sir Ian Gilmour ( 1978 ) has claimed is the essence of true and wise Toryism : the avoidance of ‘ dogma ’ ; the balancing of opposed social forces ; the concession of reform where reform is due in order to hold together a ‘ national ’ constituency ( despite the fact that Gilmour viewed the 1974/75 legislative programme as a dangerous concession to sectional union interests and a threat to the constitution — true Toryism is only recognised as such well after the event ! ) .
19 The specific question that Aspect , together with jean Dalibard and Gérard Roger , has attacked is commonly known as the Einstein-Podolsky-Rosen paradox , the essence of which runs as follows .
20 One of the biggest , and most satisfying , projects has organised was the roof work in Gallery 18 — Victorian Engineering .
21 One of the strengths Scotland has enjoyed is having a group of players who have become stronger than the individuals .
22 The model which Interplayce has designed is a result of thinking from ‘ the child in , rather than the building out .
23 What has mattered is their ultimate reception as ecumenical by the Church at large .
24 Until now , the question of Mary 's personal behaviour has been all-important ; what has mattered was to establish her guilt or innocence , as if that would be the end of the story .
25 Does he agree that in choosing the alternative route the Secretary of State for Transport was second guessing and ignoring the possibility that an environmental assessment would conclude that the general route that he has selected was as inappropriate as the one from which the hon. Gentleman thinks his constituents would suffer ?
26 Eight of the properties Citalia has secured are in an old farmhouse on the estate about two miles away from the castle .
27 In other words what any other writer has written is open territory .
28 Wilfred Owen has written many different types of poems and the only other well-known sonet that he has written is ‘ Anthem for Doomed Youth ’ .
29 Even the government 's re-entry into the gilts market as public borrowing has risen is seen as a sign of hope .
30 Whether one accepts that view or not — and I do not think that it is valid in its simple form ( see Fine and Harris ( 1985 ) ) — it is a powerful one ; in that context , the fact that the proportion of foreign assets in UK pension funds ' total investments has risen is a mark of the power that the post-1979 boom in the City 's foreign investment has had .
  Next page