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146 Sentences With "have a lot to do with"

How to use have a lot to do with in a sentence? Find typical usage patterns (collocations)/phrases/context for "have a lot to do with" and check conjugation/comparative form for "have a lot to do with". Mastering all the usages of "have a lot to do with" from sentence examples published by news publications.

Sales tactics have a lot to do with it, too.
They have a lot to do with legitimate security interests.
And city councils have a lot to do with it.
These arrests may have a lot to do with that effort.
He suspects those cellphones have a lot to do with it.
This appears to have a lot to do with a misunderstanding of consent.
That, my friend, will probably have a lot to do with the economy.
Another former administration official said grudges have a lot to do with it.
And those goals have a lot to do with who owns the airports.
According to Fortune, it may have a lot to do with the economy.
Well, it might have a lot to do with Ezra's girlfriend Nicole (Rebecca Breeds).
When I meditate, I think, no, you have a lot to do with it.
Ferrari's research also indicates that nurture may have a lot to do with it.
The reasons for his silence have a lot to do with Japan's legal system.
The structure of the novel coronavirus' spikes have a lot to do with that.
"The benefits of sex change have a lot to do with body size," Todd explained.
The answers to those questions, inevitably, will have a lot to do with the play's success.
Amazon's gains have a lot to do with losses at traditional department stores, the firm said.
These factors have a lot to do with how people view abortion in any given poll.
Tapper suspects that economics have a lot to do with increased alcohol consumption in younger people.
So many of Gordon's pictures from the crime series have a lot to do with police brutality.
They have a lot to do with the destruction of manufacturing jobs and the legacy of slavery.
Fletcher says warmer weather and warmer water have a lot to do with why storms are getting stronger.
It's not only big gambling companies but I'm sure it does have a lot to do with it.
Sometime here soon he goes to the doctor and that will have a lot to do with the decision.
Ultimately, Snapchat's first day of trading will have a lot to do with how the bankers price the offering.
And that does have a lot to do with the really beautiful relationship that he has with his father.
Dr. Lerner says your plans for pregnancy have a lot to do with the way your doctor will proceed.
"It doesn't have a lot to do with whether this should be decided by the people," Ms. Cirone said.
Today, millennials are increasingly postponing marriage, and financial instability and student loan debt have a lot to do with it.
If stocks are going to make a comeback Friday, it could have a lot to do with J.P. Morgan Chase.
The station's empty areas and failed businesses have a lot to do with the way the station came to be.
It turns out, the way we produce even the simplest shape can have a lot to do with our culture.
So, he didn't want anything to do with it -- except that he did have a lot to do with it!
But I think my views have a lot to do with where I grew up, like my mum was pretty radical.
"I'm very interactive with my two grandchildren and my two children, I have a lot to do with them," he continued.
So, memory and bias have a lot to do with this generational divide we've been talking about on the show today.
I suspect many of the critical reactions to my work have a lot to do with this tension between appearance and essence.
It's related to the problems with vision, which makes sense, since attention and vision have a lot to do with each other.
"They do have a lot to do with marketing budgets and convincing people to buy the wine," he adds with a chuckle.
But, for the uninitiated, kombucha can be intimidating, and it may have a lot to do with how the fermenting process happens.
What they both have in common is that the most mundane detail can have a lot to do with telling the story.
"Somebody's going to have to unite us — President Obama is going to have a lot to do with that," he told Hill.
If Trump survives this crisis — which may mean that American democracy doesn't — tax cuts will have a lot to do with it.
We have no idea, but according to creator Sera Gamble's new Instagram post, it may have a lot to do with butterflies.
Ultimately, the direction the Democratic party goes in may have a lot to do with how far the public is willing to go.
Bestselling author and happiness expert Gretchen Rubin says your odds of meeting these goals actually have a lot to do with your personality.
Germany and China: Investor jitters have a lot to do with the fact that German's economy is shrinking while pressure builds in China.
"If you look at the reasons why people are really sick today, they don't have a lot to do with hospitalizations," he said.
A new study shows that cup height and diameter have a lot to do with people's expectations of coffee's taste, aroma, temperature, and cost.
Whether you take to it will have a lot to do with how you respond to Ms. Bell's deliberately flat, post-Valley Girl persona.
Although the causes of uterine fibroids aren't totally understood, Dr. Lerner says that doctors believe your hormones have a lot to do with them.
For me, my fondest memories really have a lot to do with going to games with my dad as a kid in the Kingdome.
That further rallying of Trump's already very loyal base seems to have a lot to do with the partisan nature of the impeachment process.
"I think the result of this trial will probably have a lot to do with the way people look at him," said attorney Barry Coburn.
Of course people can get busy, and some revealed that fluctuations in their mental health often have a lot to do with their ghosting patterns.
In fact, all of New York's whale species are listed as endangered, and human activity continues to have a lot to do with that status.
The answer to where Robert Mueller is going with his prosecution of Roger Stone could have a lot to do with conspiracy theorist Jerome Corsi.
More tariff troubles renew trade worries Mondays jitters have a lot to do with recent concerns over trade tensions between the United States and China.
But I'd bet those 500 hectares of private land (further distinguishing Grouse from Whistler, which leases Crown land) have a lot to do with it.
The answer appears to have a lot to do with polarization, not only on a national level but in how it plays out in California specifically.
"My top issues have a lot to do with creating a more just economy," she said, naming income inequality, addressing generational poverty, healthcare, and climate change.
He also said that the proposal's fate would ultimately have a lot to do with what lawmakers think about other components in a tax reform bill.
Researcher Chin-Yo Lin from University of Houston's Center for Nuclear Receptors and Cell Signaling, told CNN that it could have a lot to do with estrogen.
The choice Democrats make -- starting with Iowa but extending through the spring -- will have a lot to do with how they try to defeat Trump in November.
The way I see it, everybody has different kinks, and for those not comfortable with doing group play it does have a lot to do with jealousy.
And we're not talking about who will ultimately sit on the Iron Throne, though that outcome may have a lot to do with the plot point in question.
These bugs have a lot to do with your health and the startup is launching a clinical screening test called SmartGut to sequence the DNA of those microbes.
I don't have a lot to do with the creation of the music besides providing the comic for inspiration, so I trust in her skill and taste completely.
Self-help and happiness expert Gretchen Rubin tells CNBC Make It that your susceptibility to feeling burnout may actually have a lot to do with your personality type.
The first is that I'm making not just one main character but the whole cast, and secondly the story doesn't really have a lot to do with them.
To be a Republican in West Virginia 03 is to be on the right side of a social divide that does not have a lot to do with policies.
And games that are actually out on February 14th, none of which seem to have a lot to do with copping off (more blowing things off, things like ballsacks).
Patrick Corcoran, vice president of the National Association of Theatre Owners (NATO), told Axios that subscription services and the date of release have a lot to do with it.
Laredo is a very impoverished city, and the neighborhoods within Laredo that the Wolf Boys were from are particularly poor, so economics have a lot to do with it.
I'm just saying that these kinds of things don't have a lot to do with whether I'm qualified to be on the federal reserve board and setting interest rates.
The intent is to open doors to talented professionals in a business in which who you know can have a lot to do with where you get to work.
Kim Churches, CEO of American Association of University Women, says the hiring practices of many organizations have a lot to do with the issues we see in the workplace.
VINCENTELLI Right, but I think, Jesse, that your objection reaches much deeper since it appears to have a lot to do with how storytelling is done in a show.
And how well the news media gets through its postelection hangover will have a lot to do with how the next chapter in the American political story is told.
Very often, however, many of the costs associated with colleges don't have a lot to do with education per se, whether it's health care for faculty or energy costs.
And, according to WisdomTree Asset Management's Executive Vice President and Global Head of Research Jeremy Schwartz, their advantages have a lot to do with the types of stocks they hold.
Those who enter the candidate pipeline fall out somewhere along the way — and the culture and recruiting methods of tech companies seem to have a lot to do with it.
" And Trump responded: "No, but the states are also going to have a lot to do with it because we ultimately want to get it back down to the states.
I'm gonna be a big person here and say that might have a lot to do with some insecurities I'm carrying that I may need to discover and work on.
That difference, experts suspect, might have a lot to do with one simple move: better handwashing below deck, by members of a very well-trained, and disease-weary cruising crew.
Senator Dianne Feinstein, the ranking member, Democrat, on the Senate Judiciary Committee which is going to have a lot to do with this, here is what she says about moving forward.
He knows that its athletic sponsorships have a lot to do with the luck it has had, but they will continue to keep working to get things right the first time.
North Korea's refusal to drop its nuclear weapons program may have a lot to do with the fate that met another would-be nuclear power's dictator just a few years ago.
Obviously, those huge wealth transfers that Germany gets from the rest of the euro area have a lot to do with Berlin's overflowing government coffers and its export-driven economic growth.
I train animals and also have a lot to do with conservation, and I don't see anything wrong with it as long as the person who's in charge knows what they're doing.
But every county in the United States appears to have seen at least one U.F.O. In the end, the Costas noted, the spikes may have a lot to do with media coverage.
But for Trump, location is socially constructed — a location is valuable if people see it as such, which may not have a lot to do with the physical reality of the location.
This time of year, though, most of the headlines coming out of Venice, Telluride, and Toronto have a lot to do with how they're helping set the agenda for the Academy Awards race.
Quite what Carter will be doing at Jeff Bezos's company remains unclear, but it's a safe bet that it'll have a lot to do with Amazon Music Unlimited, Amazon Echo and music curation.
It's an investigation that's going to result in a report, and the issue will be what happens to that report, and public opinion is going to have a lot to do with that.
At the congressional level, it may get played out before then, but winning or losing a majority in the House or Senate could have a lot to do with how quickly that happens.
Even when it works as advertised, the specific economics of Lyft Line and UberPOOL are confusing, change regularly, and have a lot to do with whether or not there's a surge in effect.
The reasons seem as complicated as the show's structure, but have a lot to do with consistently strong writing and performances, two of the show's major subplots and its introduction of an enticing mystery.
"Don't think for a minute that this plan that they're trying to pretty up and pass on doesn't have a lot to do with those ugly plans in the fifties and sixties," he said.
Riggs said the disparity between the two dates could have a lot to do with whether or not couples with children were able to get away on a week night for a Valentine's dinner.
Of course, salary and job stability have a lot to do with one's career path and employer, which is why certain fields seem to have a more favorable association with lasting marriages — and others don't.
And while that can be true for some people, Nomi feels like sex is a big part of being a human, and that gender confirmation surgery can have a lot to do with sex, too.
But the exaggerated features of Instagram's biggest beauty influencers (Kylie Jenner, Kandee Johnson and others) have a lot to do with the prevailing beauty ambitions: lips that can range from subtly defined to sex doll.
These charts showing a rise in deductibles, I think, have a lot to do with this other chart: one showing a slow, steady rise in American support for a single-payer style health care system.
"The president recognizes that the success of this will have a lot to do with the future of his presidency, and I think the members recognize that too," House Rules Committee chairman Pete Sessions told me.
"I think responses to [Ocasio-Cortez] have a lot to do with the fact that she's young, charismatic, the digital native, a woman of color, and gives the appearance of following her own rules," says Chemaly.
"How Freeport fares in 2016 will have a lot to do with both copper and oil pricing and how the company shapes itself from a strategic standpoint," said Jeremy Sussman, an analyst for Clarksons Platou Securities.
In "Carol," the visuals have a lot to do with point of view, with audiences frequently anchored to the subjective perspective of Ms. Mara's character, Therese, while her gaze is often focused on Ms. Blanchett's Carol.
By the way, if you want an example of a policy that really did have a lot to do with the Great Depression's spread, that would be the gold standard — which Ted Cruz wants to restore.
Conversely, the cheery story of Aceh's surprisingly rapid rebound from the 2004 tsunami turns out to have a lot to do with the central government reaching a generous peace accord with the local secessionist rebel group.
China's stimulus measure "allows more opportunity for investment and growth in the Chinese economy ... and it certainly helps our companies that have a lot to do with trade," said James Tao, a market analyst at CommSec.
He points out that the way cookies work isn't simple in a way consumers are likely to grasp, so the way these new options are presented will have a lot to do with how consumers will proceed.
So I think that stigma kind of persists and even though people don't address it anymore, it does have a lot to do with why we haven't been able to have a real conversation about this song.
Trump's climb in approval is much more modest, and that may have a lot to do with how divisive he already was, how he's contradicted people like Dr. Anthony Fauci and picked fights with governors like Cuomo.
"The type of reimbursement or the source of reimbursement doesn't seem to have a lot to do with these conflicts," Pope told me, noting that these situations arise in the UK, Canada, Australia, France, and the United States.
Now, however, Finn Wolfhard, who portrays Mike on the series, is here to remind us that the reason for Steve's newfound affection for the Hawkins kids may have a lot to do with Steve's general sense of unfulfillment.
Deep in the bowels of Facebook's serpentine campus in Menlo Park, California, is a room about 25 feet square that may have a lot to do with how the world thinks about the company in the coming months.
Before we get too far into it, it's best to know that dopamine fasting probably doesn't really have a lot to do with dopamine—definitely not enough to merit the moniker, according to researchers familiar with the neurotransmitter.
Those last two statistics have a lot to do with Porzingis, whose 1.94 blocks per game was the league's sixth-best mark going into Tuesday's games; the number of shots he had contested was the league's second-highest.
Its entry into the Olympics, starting in 2000, and televised Ironman triathlon competitions have a lot to do with its surge in participation, but the unique combination of disciplines and the über-workout it provides are the big appeal.
There were good reasons both of those camps were so influential, even among those who didn't read the books themselves, and they have a lot to do with the timing of The Sorcerer's Stone's US release, 20 years ago.
"I'm strongly considering it — it's going to have a lot to do with who enters the race," Mr. Avenatti said in a telephone interview Thursday night from Iowa, where he ate not one but two pork chops at the state fair.
There's nothing all that unholy about any of these habits, because cultural contexts have a lot to do with what we consider to be acceptable food practices: It's the practice as much as the pairing that makes them a dish.
What they saw was astonishing:Wired:DEEP IN THE bowels of Facebook's serpentine campus in Menlo Park, California is a room about 20163-feet-square that may have a lot to do with how the world thinks about the company in the coming months.
I think the timing and the set up of the space will have a lot to do with whether people genuinely get up and dance, but any fan of the music will be hard pressed to sit still when the drops kick in!
The Wharton School's Jeremy Siegel believes it'll have a lot to do with President Donald Trump's intention to get business-friendly reforms passed on Capitol Hill — not the latest Federal Reserve decision on interest rates or better-than-expected economic growth figures.
Meteorologists caution that a hurricane can be very dangerous no matter what its category, especially since the Saffir-Simpson scale doesn't account for rainfall levels or storm surges — not directly, anyway — and those factors have a lot to do with flood risk.
That, in turn, will cause the value of the pound to fall and likely prompt a recession whose severity and duration will have a lot to do with the short-term policy choices made by the UK government and the Bank of England.
FROM PEN: Katherine Heigl Reveals the Emotional Way She Told Her Daughters She Was Pregnant Fatone's love for Halloween costumes goes way back — in fact, his older daughter's own affinity for that portion of the holiday might have a lot to do with her dad.
"If you think of health and wellness not just as a matter of physical health and being free from disease but also the mental and social aspects, I think the geothermal heat and communal pools have a lot to do with that," Hafstein said.
What I say to the big tech companies is that even though you may not want to have a lot to do with politics, as you can see — and I've been saying this for several years to them — it's going to come your way.
The apartment -- listed by Brett Lawyer of Hilton & Hyland -- has terraces on three sides for 360 degree views of L.A. The hotel sits on prime real estate -- near Wilshire and Canon -- so the pricing may have a lot to do with location, location, location.
"Your pores have a lot to do with genetics, but ongoing sun damage can also change pore size and appearance for the worse, as well as gravity pulling on the skin, making the pore look enlarged," explains Paula Begoun, skin-care expert and founder of Beautypedia.
The main theory was, if you could really boil down good behavior and bad behavior in a big umbrella kind of way, it seems to have a lot to do with empathy and a general sense of the way your actions affect other people, and vice versa.
Theory 6: Game of Thrones Is A Story Written By Samwell Tarly The Last Harpy has a fascinating video suggesting the ending of Game of Thrones may have a lot to do with Samwell Tarly and the art of telling a story (you're going to want to watch it).
"Short-term exchange rate does not have a lot to do with the fundamentals, it's much affected by the sentiment, it's very volatile, and not in a linear relationshiop," Guan Tao, a former director of the international payments department at China's State Administration of Foreign Exchange, the currency regulator.
Lyft's ability to rapidly bring on a lot of partners in the car maker space, specifically around autonomy, may have a lot to do with rival Uber's ongoing problems, which now also include mounting calls for CEO Travis Kalanick to step back, at least temporarily, from his leadership role.
According to Nintendo of America president Reggie Fils-Aimé, the early success and future plans of Switch actually have a lot to do with the comparative struggles of the Wii U. "We knew during the development of Nintendo Switch that we had a product that was really breakthrough," he says.
"Even though it was a wild day, no real change at the end of the day... How Freeport fares in 2016 will have a lot to do with both copper and oil pricing and how the company shapes itself from a strategic standpoint," Clarksons Platou Securities analyst Jeremy Sussman said.
According to a recent article in the New York Times, "Why U.S. Women Are Leaving Jobs Behind," 81 percent of women in Switzerland are in the workforce, versus 1003 percent in the US. I believe attitudes toward professional part-time work — for both men and women — have a lot to do with this.
He even shies away from the word "wearable," and says there's a stickiness associated with Whoop's analytics platform; which may have a lot to do with the fact that Whoop is catering to elite athletes who already care about their performance, as opposed to nudging people who aren't already active to be a little more active.
Those other things, by the way, include a Chinese slowdown that some of us have been predicting for years and finally seems to be happening; the troubles of Europe, which have a lot to do with a drastic slowdown of population growth; and, maybe, shifts in United States business that have moved us toward technology companies that don't need to do a lot of physical investment.
I still write a reasonable amount of criticism that doesn't have a lot to do with my experience at all, and I've been dipping in and out of a narrative nonfiction project on Jennifer Laude, a trans woman who was murdered by a US Marine in 2014, as well as the process of filming a documentary that tracks my work on this case, called Call Her Ganda, that's premiering at Tribeca Film Festival in April.
When things really get moving, as on the hotfooted "My Queen Is Harriet Tubman" or the steady climb of "My Queen Is Yaa Asantewaa," Mr. Hutchings is liable to throw in his lot with the drummers, tonguing his reed to make a percussive, flaring effect that's a bit like a rimshot on a hand drum, or the air-horn effect of a West Indian D.J. This is one of many personal gestures Mr. Hutchings uses that don't have a lot to do with the broader lexicon of the jazz saxophone.
Its staggering market capitalization — at close to $150 billion after an epic stock rally that commenced last year, Tesla is on paper valued as three GMs — masks everything from its limited manufacturing capacity (one car factory, with a second just coming online in China) to its skimpy cash-on-hand (roughly $7 billion, enough to run its business for a year or so) to its meager profits (its most recent quarter in the black closed out 2019 on a high note, but emissions credits have a lot to do with that).

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