Example sentences of "have in " in BNC.

  Next page
No Sentence
1 Tom has in turn infected Mary and Sam — he 's bisexual .
2 The portraits of Chatterton have something of the importance to the novel that the living and ageing likeness has in The Picture of Dorian Gray .
3 Herling is thought to resemble Dostoevsky , whose Prototypical prison book , The House of the Dead , has in it a mansion tenanted by obnoxious , caricatured Jews .
4 It is the specific effect this religious form has in Ireland which is under scrutiny .
5 And yet , unless everything has in fact been done , there will also be no work .
6 Marcus leaps out of bed and starts to play Victorian hymns on the little portable organ he has in his bedroom .
7 I can see this in my own case , where losing a job or a home has in certain instances reopened old wounds .
8 The Disciplinary Code in Schedule 1 to the Police ( Discipline ) Regulations 1985 contains an offence of ‘ improper disclosure of information ’ , which is committed where a member of a police force without proper authority communicates to any person , any information which he has in his possession as a member of a police force .
9 Improper disclosure of information , which offence is committed where a member of a police force ( a ) without proper authority communicates to any person , any information which he has in his possession as a member of a police force …
10 A sudden change of éaulement , an unusual turn in-out of legs or arms , or quick jumps up and then down to the floor followed by a roll over or even a somersault can accentuate the particular place that unusual movement has in the whole design .
11 And the Epilogue also points forward in its closing words to ‘ a new tale ’ , because ‘ our present one is ended ’ , and the narrator says he has in mind the slow regeneration of Raskolnikov , now in prison , through love and suffering .
12 He specifies 150 years because he has in mind the social and political reforms of Peter the Great in the early Eighteenth Century .
13 His view is that what the Soviet Union has in small quantities is as good as the technology of the West , but that the country lacks the ability to turn out production volumes .
14 When Schniedau says , ‘ What Pound did to English literature and British sensibilities does n't seem forgivable ’ , he doubtless has in mind certain passages from How to Read , which was originally addressed to the American readers of the New York Herald Tribune Books on 13 , 20 , and 27 January 1929. for instance :
15 And in saying this , one has in mind not the Cantos but the much more straightforward and generally serviceable forms which Pound put into currency in collections like Ripostes ( 1912 ) and Lustra ( 1916 ) .
16 If this suggests that there are other sorts of English people than the sort Auden has in his sights , on the other hand it lends point and force to his censure of Beerbohm , and of what Beerbohm stands for in English life .
17 The Sandinistas recognise that perestroika will bring changes in their relationship with Moscow , which has in recent years been worth around £625m annually , according to European diplomats .
18 In spite of her disability , Elaine has in the past led a remarkably active and normal life .
19 Eurotunnel , which is already in default of its credit agreement with the banks , has in effect been given until the end of the year to settle its differences with the contractors to permit ‘ a viable financing strategy to be put in place ’ .
20 No actress alive better captures the ferocious pathos of the little heartbreak writ large , and although her immaculate comic technique sustains whole passages of visual lunacy , she has in addition the much rarer theatrical gift of being able to transmit emotion in its purest form .
21 The other flights Lendl has in mind are the erratic ones which transport him on their excursions to the net in his long quest to win the Wimbledon title .
22 Sir Alan has in the past written about his deep misgivings over intervention and has recently let it be known in the City that he believes the economy is at last showing signs of pronounced slowdown , a view not fully shared by the Treasury .
23 Inflation will come down through the use of high interest rates , as it has in the past .
24 Not an unimportant role in a place as hot as this , but not quite the one he has in mind .
25 What he has in mind seems curiously like the Ripping Yarns TV series in which he and Terry Jones sent up the boy 's adventure story with tales like ‘ Across the Andes by Frog ’ .
26 The flow of investment between such a country and an industrialised nation is one-way , not reciprocal , and the stake which the less developed country has in overseas interests is minimal ( or possibly non-existent ) .
27 Greenblatt has in mind here that extraordinary moment when Faustus seals his pact with the devil by uttering Christ 's dying words on the cross : ‘ consummatum est ’ .
28 Anthropology has in fact developed as the science of the evolution of human society and many early anthropological works take the form of natural histories of mankind .
29 Recent work by several anthropologists has stressed , by contrast , the State 's previously over-looked role as an exploitative mechanism , and this work has in most cases been influenced by Marxism [ e.g. Terray , 1977 ; Bloch 1977 ] .
30 Odd-Knut tells us that to ask a Lapp that question is like asking an Englishman how much money he has in the bank .
  Next page