Example sentences of "[that] [noun] have [prep] " in BNC.

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1 The verdict was that Horsley had about as clean a bill of health as it was possible for a real , live capitalist to have .
2 Extending this aim meant that signs had to be invented when no obvious word — sign equivalent existed .
3 On the other hand , he points out that Devlin had in fact answered the question in the affirmative , and had justified this response by suggesting that , just as society can take steps to preserve itself against acts of treason , then so it may protect itself from attacks on established morality , for this too can threaten society 's existence .
4 The longer the dispute continued the more officialdom in Scottish education recognized that support had to be provided .
5 Further , while it was said that the decision of Browne J. in the Bognor Regis case [ 1972 ] 2 Q.B. 169 had been generally approved , or not criticised , by textbook writers , and by the Faulks Committee in 1975 , it was not suggested that Parliament had in any legislation apparently treated that decision as representing settled law .
6 If Parliament had meant to say that any distribution or publication should suffice , it could very easily have said so ; the courts are bound to make sense of the words that Parliament has in fact used .
7 It is certainly true that states have in the past used methods and means of warfare not outlawed by any specific prohibition although running counter to general principles , and they have sought to justify this by reference either to the principle of reprisal or that of military effectiveness .
8 Subsequently , the owner claimed damages from Veitchi , claiming that Veitchi had through their negligence laid the floor badly .
9 The exception is , of course , in the pronouncement that shareholders have in effect surrendered their power to professional management , a pronouncement which does not so much face the central question of the rights of ownership as to try to pass it by .
10 The fact that adjectives have to be placed in front of nouns in English , for instance , means that their occurrence in this position has little or no significance because it is not the result of choice .
11 It became obvious that pushy-aggression had to be replaced by calm , reassurance , and bribery .
12 Were these the woods , I wondered , that Kingsley had in mind when he wrote of Tom 's escape from Ellie 's little white bedroom ?
13 These results show that tenascin has at least 16 consecutive fibronectin like type III repeats .
14 This stipulated that products had to be fit for their purpose and meet standards of appearance and finish being free from minor defects as well as safe and durable .
15 The dust allergy means that Will has to be bedded on paper , and his hay always has to be soaked .
16 The Church throughout the world received orders and instructions which it obeyed willingly enough , though sometimes it regretted that there were no arrangements for dialogue and that it had not been invited to collaborate ; the result was that unity had to be lived out in passive acceptance rather than celebrated in fraternity ( Pensiamo al Concilio 9 ; see Hebblethwaite , 1984 , p. 409 ) .
17 Slowing down means that roads have to be crossed with more care and that bad road and pavement conditions are greater hazards .
18 The poll asked : ‘ In building roads it sometimes happens that roads have to be built through or across sites of natural beauty or historical interest .
19 Mrs Castle 's contribution to this cornucopia of political wisdom and strategic insight was that policies had to be put in their philosophical context to win consent .
20 Zak cursed and said that Pierre had in fact been going to knock Raoul to the ground at a slightly later rime , and now that would have to be changed .
21 For equilibrium , transactions demand must be equal to £45 million and , from graph ( c ) , we see that income has to be £67.5 million .
22 She wished that Fernando had in fact made fiery , passionate and glorious love to her on that blanket , because at least her body would have been sated and that would have been something at the very least .
23 In the earlier regime it was accepted that rules had to be general to some extent , and open to change to allow for adaptation to changing circumstances .
24 Little did he know then , but he had thrown away probably the last good chance that Germany had of winning the war .
25 For much of the broadcast he was answering questions put by two interviewers , but as it was drawing to a close he suddenly began reading from a prepared text , declaring : " I warned in 1987 that Gorbachev has in his character an aspiration for absolute personal power .
26 Even so the sum of money Minton had donated was so large that drinkers had to be brought in from the street .
27 The test now is whether the degree of carelessness amounted to gross or blatant negligence , recognising the practicalities of everyday life and that risks have to be undertaken .
28 Following the case of Sofi v Prudential and the 1989 I O B Report the test now is whether the degree of carelessness amounted to gross or blatant negligence , recognising the practicalities of everyday life and that risks have to be undertaken .
29 Longman did particularly well in the U K , although coeternal markets were difficult and er , sales in the schools markets in er , North America was hard going for Addison Wesley , with U S physical problems restricting the , amou money that schools had to er , had to use .
30 Rutter et al , in a detailed analysis of 12 schools in an inner London borough , make bold statements about the influence that schools have upon pupil attainment and behaviour .
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