Example sentences of "[conj] [adv] [adv] he have [verb] " in BNC.

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1 As the sun came up and he was able to make out the grassy track along which he had been striding through the night he realised that once again he had missed the verderers , that there were no fresh hoof-marks .
2 He returns to his routine , but finds that once again he has failed .
3 It had to be soon , it had to be quick , and so far he had seen no way of achieving it .
4 Wolfgang was now 21 years old , no longer a child , and so far he had devoted his entire life to music .
5 And so far he has spent only £25,000 on new players .
6 He was known for a devout man , the lord of Parfois , a patron of pilgrims and collector of relics , and long ago he had taken the cross ; when he wanted to blaspheme he turned to his classical education and its multiple gods , and loosed his barbs at them .
7 However , the outbreak of war again in 1805 forced Gibbs to close in Cadiz , and once more he had to struggle to survive .
8 Sometimes she would climax first , sometimes he , and on good nights they would explode together so that they felt the same tingling in the very tips of their toes and even then he 'd had to remember to withdraw — just in case .
9 Well he 's a ministerial servant at last he was just sitting there and nothing you know for years since I 've came into the truth , he was , he was n't doing at all nothing and then lately erm , because he did , he did have a business and then he had er some pigeons er racing pigeons and all he was all involved more in making money and er you know , and then gradually he 's got rid of er , of the things that will actually er took a lot of his time , so he spent a lot of time with his family and with in the
10 Years earlier he had resided briefly at a clinic with Vivien , where Robert Sencourt claimed to have first met them both : and earlier still he had spoken of a mental condition of ‘ long-standing ’ .
11 He preferred painting on a closely woven canvas , and sometimes when he had finished the work he placed a sheet of paper carefully over the fresh paint to merge the colours .
12 For his first work on a standard-gauge railway Boyd has remained in that favoured territory , North Wales , and almost fittingly he has chosen one of the Principality 's less well known routes .
13 Mm I went into his room and yet again he has got wet washing hanging up inside that room .
14 She 'd used him and then abandoned him , and yet still he 'd continued to protect her .
15 The former Cardiff winger has his faults but so far he has adapted well to his new code and in a Bradford side playing more expansively these days is seeing plenty of the ball .
16 But only yesterday he had pulled off the best purchase yet — not the biggest , but a vital strip of land running along the foreshore .
17 He had feared as much — had known the match was ill-conceived — but once more he had refused to listen to the voice within .
18 He once finished third , but more often he has sacrificed his own chances by slowing down to help British runners who were struggling to complete the course .
19 God has led them to believe it was rational , but now apparently he has cheated them by unfairly slipping in a mystery .
20 He had expected the sack at the time , but strangely enough he had had more than his share of work from that day on .
21 Back then he had sounded so certain — so sure of things — but even then he had questioned it , at some deeper level .
22 Yet I am looking forward to meeting Mr Stratton again , because thus far he has refused point-blank to tell me who the murderer was … ’
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