Example sentences of "have [verb] [adv] of the " in BNC.

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1 It is quite evident that in some areas farming has become a distinctly precarious occupation but , in exchanging the effects of the EC 's Common Agricultural Policy for the need to produce results in a rugby field , Hare may find that he has jumped out of the frying pan into the fire .
2 Well quite a lot of the lakes and streams have lost their fish , of course that 's the , that 's the most important thing , between , particularly salmon and trout , and we have discovered that they are killed not so much by the acid , but by the aluminium which has leaked out of the soil by the acid water , the acid rain , and er that er the fish find this very hard to tolerate .
3 But it is Damon , fourth from the top , who has vaulted ahead of the others , thanks to the cutting-edge characters he developed for Keenan 's show : an angry circus clown , a flamboyant film reviewer , and , riskiest of all , Handiman , ah , uh , differently abled super-hero .
4 Once married and committed to their partner , they may find excitement has flown out of the window .
5 This is spoken at a time when the media are documenting despair amongst Cork Street galleries and recognition by major collectors such as the Saatchi family that the bottom has fallen out of the market for modern art .
6 The secretary-general of Génération Ecologie , François Donzel , has resigned ahead of the party 's first congress planned for November .
7 County NatWest , the merchant bank heavily censured by inspectors from the Department of Trade and Industry for its role in the Blue Arrow affair , has dropped out of the table for the first time .
8 We have to look at what has dropped out of the system . ’
9 Having noticed this discrepancy , Husameddin suggests that the text of Ibn Hajar ought to read thus suggesting that a ( seven ) has dropped out of the text .
10 It seems to me from what Mr in particular said , that the bottom as it were has dropped out of the market to this extent that it seems that the policy that he 's advocating , is not thirty one thousand any more , but thirty one thousand plus any amount of windfalls and recycling .
11 My mate Mike has dropped out of the ‘ lineup ’ for the home game vs Blackburn .
12 Little hard news has come out of the world 's biggest advertising group since it put the division on the block .
13 ‘ This has come out of the blue , and we are due to go to Argentina next summer , ’ said Wood .
14 Even more interesting chemistry has come out of the matrix isolation work on metal carbonyls .
15 The other lesson that has come out of the work within the RAF and from the work done outside is that expert systems in particular , but AI in general will not come about as stand-alone , independent systems , but will be embedded or connected to existing or planned conventional computing .
16 CPMA Managing Director , Nigel Rushman , claims that several other sponsors have already signed for the Sevens spectacular in April at Murrayfield , but for a variety of reasons none has come out of the woods yet .
17 If any good has come out of the Mandy 's story , it is the barrage of publicity it has provided on under-age sex .
18 SOMETHING good has come out of the NatWest Access computer system foul-up which left customers with muddled statements .
19 The appointment of Sally Coleman to the job of manager of Waterstones at Harrods from her current post running the Covent Garden outpost of the empire has come out of the blue .
20 Moreover , there is nothing in the 152-page report to satisfy the Opposition , industry or the few remaining Tory rebels that the Government has come out of the review with a national energy policy .
21 I mean eventually eventually , sooner or later and it might be later if somebody else will still it has to come out of the profit margin .
22 If that money has to come out of the existing budget , then we should , or the Chief Constable , or the Police Committee ought to look at the priorities again .
23 She has written recently of the current situation in Zaire .
24 Midland has tried hard to break the ties , and with its First Direct branchless banking service it has moved ahead of the market , but it needed time and resources and luck .
25 Meanwhile , the rest of Europe has moved ahead of the UK in other innovations in the urban environment .
26 Thanks to all this , finance has moved out of the spreadsheet and into the political arena , the courtroom and even into trade negotiations .
27 Swedish maker Valmet — never one to stay with one importer for very long — has moved out of the Benson camp and set up its own UK importer .
28 The traditional patriarchal structure has been eroded , partly because the formal head Of the house has moved out of the home into the completely separate sphere of work , and partly because the authority he derives from control over economic resources and property is eroded in an urban , money economy .
29 The extent to which control has moved out of the hands of the local authorities can be seen in Figure 6.7 , where an asterisk ( * ) indicates a power traditionally held by the LEA which can now be taken over by schools which ‘ opt out ’ ; a dagger ( t ) indicates new powers which central government has taken on since 1979 , often transferred from the LEA ; and a double dagger ( 1– ) in the parents or governors column indicates new duties and rights they have received since 1979 .
30 Make a Fel test for the character who has done most of the talking .
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