have to do with

VERB
  1. be relevant to
    There were lots of questions referring to her talk
    My remark pertained to your earlier comments
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How To Use have to do with In A Sentence

  • In the meantime, the miserable gits who can't be bothered with the print version will have to do without.
  • This goes some way to explaining the idea that works of art have to do with truth.
  • The most interesting features of federalist thought have to do with the suppression of faction.
  • What you have to do with a book, a simple, obvious, exasperating difficult thing, is, read it.
  • And how much does television have to do with it, that maligned medium always associated with dumbing down?
  • My questions have to do with your proposals for reorganizing the financial system.
  • It might also have to do with having been the underdog for so long so that women kind of scrabble in these different jobs. The End Of The Macho Man?
  • The fact that Antin creates a talk-poetry which is argumentative and deliberative, and rests on thematics that broadly have to do with social and cultural placing, connects up with this.
  • 1895 OW 1886 OW Fully fifty-four of my discoveries have to do with land animals: alcine elk, moose W dasyurine dasyure antelopine antelope W (1839-47) OW aspine asp 1644 O didelphine opossum bisontine bison 1885 - 1847 OW VERBATIM: The Language Quarterly Vol IV No 1
  • Am I the only one seeing the irony, that the FIRST thing I have to do with this copy of Repair of Books by Cockerell is REMOVE THE 2½ "x 1½" BOOKSELLER TICKET THAT THE VENDOR APPLIED TO IT?!? at Archive 2008-01-01
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