Example sentences of "[noun] [conj] [conj] he have [vb pp] " in BNC.

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1 In fact yesterday we said I wonder if he 's got a new car or whether he 's got visitors .
2 The survey manager has located and designed the survey stations in the Chief Superintendent or whether he 's had them built .
3 Conveyancing documents should include a certificate by the purchaser saying either that he had been fully advised by a wholly independent practitioner or that he had declined such advice — and the certificate should contain a prominent ‘ health warning ’ against declining to take it .
4 It crossed my mind that if he had changed his opinions it might be partly because the squalor and expense of the flat — made worse by my bad housekeeping — had begun to get him down .
5 He had discharged one of them from the infirmary in no worse condition than when he had arrived .
6 Frank claimed that he had not known that Gobie was running a prostitution service from Frank 's apartment on Capitol Hill and that he had dismissed him upon learning of it .
7 Hew was convicted on the basis of confessions he had made under torture and because he had read The Dogs of War , a novel about a coup in an imaginary country widely thought to be based on Equatorial Guinea .
8 However , his wife , Eleonora Popa , confirmed on March 2 that he had been receiving " anonymous threats " for over two months and that he had received no support from the Justice Ministry , which had confiscated his suicide letter .
9 We argued that Western rulers had finally taken out against Saddam not because he was a monster but because he had broken loose and was no longer their monster .
10 He had stared at the bottle in his hand , walked outside , smashed it against the outhouse wall , watched the liquor run down , dark against the brickwork , and returned to the house , almost reeled past Matey as though he had drunk all of it , and mounted the stairs to her room to remind himself of what he had lost , hurt though it might .
11 And he walked away from the manor as though he had arrived there as empty-handed , half-naked and alone as when he left .
12 ’ He was looking at her but now there was a far-away look in his eyes as though he 'd forgotten her presence .
13 A little red light as though he 's got no oil but he has .
14 There is a story that when he had dictated the last sentence of his monumental Summa Theologiae , he laid his head in his hands sadly .
15 ( When he finally left us for the United States , he took these gifts back from me , with the excuse that as he had bought them in Berlin he wanted to show them to the dancer .
16 Does a man do murder because a mate of his riles him in a pub or because he 's got more money than he has ? ’
17 It had not been shown that the Special Commissioner had misdirected himself or that he had erred in law or that he had arrived at a wholly insupportable conclusion .
18 I tried to impress upon the child that if he had landed in England before he met me , he would not have spoken English and people there might have regarded him as ridiculous .
19 Nick had landed the job of editor and when he had told Harriet about it his enthusiasm had been infectious .
20 The coach did not in fact crash and if he had remained on it he would have suffered no harm .
21 He realized that we felt disgusted at what had been achieved in the commandos and that he had had this brainwave of small parties behind the lines . ’
22 Mr Fuchs claims that he repeatedly warned the city council of the administrative shambles in his museum and that he had proposed to bring in management consultants , a request which was refused on grounds of cost .
23 I had to keep reminding myself that the plans we 'd had were n't just a dream and that he had loved me .
24 It 's common talk that Alfred is round the twist and that he 's got worse recently , since his mother died .
25 I was told that the manager had gone to lunch , and when I asked for him to be bleeped I was told again that he had gone to lunch and that he had left his bleep at the switchboard — all in a tone that suggested that this was standard behaviour .
26 Her mother had once remarked that it was her opinion that Harry had actually caused Nathan 's idiocy in a fit of temper soon after he was born , and through whispered gossip over the years she had guessed that Tristram had become the focus of conflict between his parents and that he had found it increasingly necessary to defend both Nathan and his mother against his father 's violent outbursts of temper .
27 Contemporary reaction to this magnificent poem is typified by a critic in The Monthly Review in 1763 who thought he knew that Smart was forbidden the use of writing materials in the asylum and that he had written it ‘ with the end of a key , upon the wainscot ’ .
28 Thus Lord Bridge 's guiding principle could properly be expanded to read ‘ one looks to see what the taxpayer has done to earn the profit in question and where he has done it . ’
29 Darren had always been a good and well-behaved boy but once he had returned home he had been waking repeatedly in the night and been difficult to manage in the day .
30 He replied that he had tried to get an attorney to break the contract and that he had spoken to this lawyer and that lawyer .
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