Example sentences of "[noun] have [adv] [vb pp] [adv prt] " in BNC.

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1 The technique has indeed opened up a whole new area of meiotic investigation in the male .
2 The Duchess has even taken up sketching to feel more at one with the subject of her new book ( Victoria apparently relied on her own sketches rather than paparazzi snaps or pictures in Hello ! as mementoes of overseas trips ) and admits that she , like the late Queen , is a ‘ tireless traveller ’ .
3 With its range of awards including the new Assessors Award , the Wordpower and Numberpower certificates in communication and numeracy skills and the Vocational Access Certificate , LCCIEB has certainly taken up the challenge to provide wider access to qualifications .
4 IBM Corp has now fallen back on the reliable method of pre-announcement for its OS/2 promotion campaign .
5 IBM Corp has now wrapped up the deal under which it hands over MAPICS to Marcam Corp in return for 1.615m new shares in its partner .
6 Such lobbying has always gone on , but now with closer media scrutiny , things are more in the open .
7 His hair has since grown back .
8 I 've no teeth now , and my hair has all fallen out , but I can still think — and remember .
9 But although this burst of new direction has logically exploded out of Paris , the world 's fashion capital , the energy and creativity emerging from countries with traditionally low fashion profiles is what is truly intriguing and inspiring .
10 Politicised Islam has inevitably thrown up a new type of politician .
11 Walter de Maria has always rummaged about in the realm of the mystical and this month at Gagosian ( downtown ) until 9 May he shows his ‘ 5–7–9 ’ series , betraying a continued interest in numbers and , according to the gallery , psychic phenomenona .
12 Although Vinny Samways has now come off the transfer list , Spurs look light in the key area .
13 Even though the Ministry of Defence has already drawn up plans to pull Britain 's 2,400 troops out of the danger zone swiftly , they could find themselves caught in the crossfire very quickly .
14 Agriculture Minister John Gummer has now taken over the negotiating role .
15 And Clough has also cracked down on a similar plea from right back Brian Laws .
16 Mr Lawson has frequently ruled out supporting the pound by means other than interest rates .
17 Up to now this demarcation of activities has only come about by delegation , no control system could enforce these roles .
18 Parliament has even laid down some rules for controlling the meetings of local authorities .
19 However , so long as we remain in the Community , Parliament has effectively handed over a number of functions that it has traditionally fulfilled .
20 YOUR computer has just broken down .
21 One of New York 's most controversial ( and successful ) artists has now teamed up with Italy 's most controversial MP , Cicciolina .
22 Amazing as it must seem to non-Americans , skirmishing for the Republican presidential nomination for the 1996 election has already broken out .
23 And his research at Cranfield University has finally paid off .
24 Ian Stewart has finally sorted out his millions from his billions
25 None of the European resorts has yet gone in for the wholesale investment in snow-making which we see in the United States , mainly because the capital outlay is enormous and the running costs extremely high .
26 DEC has also set up the Object Database Assessment Team to provide consultancy to customers deciding between an object database or a traditional approach for an application .
27 Nippon DEC has also teamed up with four software companies to develop its software reseller business .
28 It backs onto a couple of euphemisms , the Civic Amenity Site and the abattoir , and a valuable pond which attracted migrating birds has regularly dried up in the summer .
29 The ministry has already sounded out robot firms about joining the project , which will bring government laboratories universities and research institutes together with the private sector .
30 By " special constructions " we mean in particular cumulative lists of adjectives as in ( 12 ) , where , however , the order may be explained by the quite general if ill-defined tendency to leave " heavy " constituents to the latest possible point , as in ( 13 ) : ( 12 ) policies foreign , social and educational ( 13 ) that salesman has just come back who kept getting in the way when you were trying to vaccinate the ewes last week Postnominal associatives may also just possibly be admitted in constructions expressing sharp opposition : ( 14 ) scientists nuclear but not biological The latter type , however , is at best questionable ; and , as a good general rule , we may say that associative adjectives do not normally occur in postnominal position .
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