Example sentences of "[adj] [noun] [modal v] [adv] have [noun sg] " in BNC.

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1 An India that overcomes its present political trial will still have work to do .
2 More and more old people will also have capital tied up in a house .
3 This sliding-scale approach might still have relevance to the Post Office Act , on which that case turned , but it has little to do with obscenity as defined in the 1959 Act .
4 The in-bureau tutors will rarely have training as their sole task .
5 People with mental disorder may well have difficulty in doing some of these things but often they would like to try , particularly if they are accompanied in the early exploratory stages , and are helped to achieve confidence in using facilities for their own enjoyment .
6 In addition to the elements of a Type II system identified above , the provisions for cost-per-case contracts may also have Type II elements ( DoH , 1989c ) .
7 This time , the chief of the Nationalist Airforce , General Kindelán , put forward the proposal that , for the duration of hostilities , the Commander-in-Chief of the Armed Forces should also have responsibility for " all national activities : political , economic , social , cultural , etc . "
8 Apart from his difficulty in hearing the contrast the Tamil speaker will also have difficulty producing both th and [ 0 ] .
9 Such a general rule would then have application , regardless of the details , to all unions recognized as marriages .
10 Medium sized firms would thus have difficulty keeping institutional investors ' business .
11 But any new Warden might well have difficulty in taking over .
12 Remote users will also have access through the JANET networks .
13 At body weights close to the required minimum women may still have anovulatory cycles even if they are menstruating because of a lack of peripherally produced oestrogen in adipose tissue .
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