Example sentences of "[that] have be [adv] [verb] [conj] " in BNC.

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1 The result over a two year period is a range of display material that has been exclusively designed and manufactured , and is now available to retailers throughout the country .
2 A listed building is one that has been officially recognized as having the right to special protection ( see also What Listing Means , Appendix I , page 154 ) .
3 It means the introduction of a new style or quality that has been well researched and developed to fill a gap in the market place .
4 This hotel is actually an old farmhouse that has been beautifully converted and is full of character .
5 The House of Lords alone proposed 569 amendments , and the Secretary of State for Education and Science , Kenneth Baker , said : ‘ I have been unable to find any measure since the war that has been more debated or had more parliamentary time allocated to it ’ .
6 This problem , associated with attempts to ascribe probabilities to scientific laws and theories in the light of given evidence , has given rise to a detailed technical research programme that has been tenaciously pursued and developed by inductivists over the last few decades .
7 The issue of a leadership challenge made an immediate return to the top of the political agenda : the discontent in the parliamentary party that had been barely suppressed since the spring resurfaced with a vengeance .
8 Everything was cooked on primus stoves by Bennett himself in pots and pans that had been thoroughly cleaned and rinsed with boiling water .
9 ‘ Across the regions , the proportion of land developed for residential use that had been previously developed or was vacant land in built-up areas varied between 33 per cent in the south west to 52 per cent in the south east , and 58 per cent in the north west . ’
10 A host of aetiological hypotheses has been formed , which have frequently been untestable and based on data that had been unsystematically selected or of dubious validity ( Rosenthal , 1968 ) .
11 But nothing in the language used justifies the conclusion that the mortgagor was agreeing to pay , or to permit to be charged on the mortgaged property , costs , charges and expenses that had been unreasonably incurred or that were unreasonable in amount .
12 Reading the two clauses together , the quantification direction did , in our opinion , entitle the defendants to quantification on an indemnity basis but did not entitle the defendants to recover costs , charges and expenses that had been unreasonably incurred or were of an unreasonable amount .
13 Idly he turned to the London addendum that had been recently updated while the shipping contract had been under negotiation .
14 a ‘ cultural heritage ’ view emphasises the responsibility of schools to lead children to an appreciation of those works of literature that have been widely regarded as amongst the finest in the language ;
15 This may simply be treasure and dead monsters , but is more likely to involve a search for a magical object or group of objects that have been carefully guarded and hidden .
16 Alternatively , the Current Law Citator indexes all the cases , of whatever date , that have been judicially considered or affected by statute since 1947 .
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