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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

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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