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The phrase "and has a lantern" is correct and usable in written English.
You can use it when describing someone or something that possesses a lantern, often in a narrative or descriptive context.
Example: "The traveler walked through the dark forest and has a lantern to light the way."
Alternatives: "and carries a lantern" or "and holds a lantern".
Exact(1)
The pyramidal roof is stepped and has a lantern on top.
Similar(59)
Each yurt sits on a raised wooden platform and has a wood-burning stove, lanterns, mattresses without linens and a propane stove for cooking.
It has a "lantern-like" quality and has received multiple awards for its design.
A larger, more intimate back room glitters with lanterns and has a Moroccan flavor.
Looking a little like a Marrakesh riad transplanted to Austria, Arte Vida has a lantern-lit communal salon and a Moorish garden replete with tent and shisha pipes.
While Mr Brooks has a lantern-jawed pleasantness to his face, she's the rare beauty of the two.
London's event will see a ceremonial cauldron lit in Trafalgar Square, Belfast's festival will have a lantern procession outside City Hall and a cauldron-lighting outside Stormont.
If you have a lantern or other light source which can be switched on and off, turn it off when you don't need it.
If you don't have a lantern, just bring a torch.
You, too, have a lantern.
But it produces fruits that look like Chinese lanterns and have a "cucumber/ pea-like flavour".
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Justyna Jupowicz-Kozak
CEO of Professional Science Editing for Scientists @ prosciediting.com