Example sentences of "has to be [det] [noun] of " in BNC.

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1 Thus although the general attitude of the public is sympathetic to the mentally handicapped in our society , there remains an overriding sense of pity that they are as they are , and a feeling that there has to be some degree of segregation between them and the rest of society .
2 Thus there has to be some degree of policy enthusiasm for prevention and outpatient services if the dominance of hospital inpatient beds over the care system is to change in any one administrative area .
3 In the end there has to be some way of restructuring the mode of analysis to take account both of gender differences in role , status and resources within the family , and also outside it .
4 In other words , if this programme is to succeed there has to be some way of associating plain honest numbers with abstract operators .
5 It has to be some kind of conspiracy .
6 There has to be some kind of learning principle behind what they are asking .
7 ‘ In any family situation where both parents are working , there has to be some division of labour , so we both concentrated on different aspects of the household commitments .
8 When things get very black there has to be some echo of the religious sense ; the longing for a sense of redemption is a deep human need .
9 It ca n't be just figures it has to be some sort of er summation does n't it as well or not ?
10 So far as far as water sports are concerned I would make one reservation which is that there has to be some form of rationalization between competed sports which may conflict with each other and I am sure this can be achieved through the Sports Council machinery .
11 Software designers will never agree to a standard format for the data in their programs so instead there has to be another piece of software that will bundle the information into a standard format to enable it to be transmitted to another computer .
12 There has to be this chain of related consequence blowing up the position of the microscopic electron into a macroscopically observable signal of its presence " here " .
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