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

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1 As Harry stood there , lost in thought , the porter he had spoken to earlier appeared from the direction of the lodge , rattling a Punch of keys in his hand .
2 None of the agencies involved in the official investigation of the Flight 103 bombing , either British or American , had even attempted to question him about the activities he had observed on Cyprus , despite all the rumours of the DEA 's involvement .
3 She tried to convince herself he was still there — smirking at the sight of her in the ropes he 'd tied to her naked body .
4 Six months before he sat his Final Schools examination , he recorded the change he had observed in ‘ My Writing — it seems daily to become poorer though my mind is slowly growing .
5 He was concerned about de Gaulle 's anti-Americanism , but was pleased by the support he had received from the French leader in 1958–61 over the Berlin crises with Russia .
6 Bold face : John Birt tells reporters outside Broadcasting House of the support he has received from colleagues
7 Coleman had gone up on the roof the previous evening for one of his periodic checks of the antennae he had rigged for the listening post .
8 Simon Threadneedle , late of GenTech , switched off his pain with the circuitbreaker he had inserted into his own greymass .
9 The desire for his total understanding was the bright song of a chanticleer to greet the longed-for dawn ; she had no idea that the longing had been seeded amongst the far-flung auroras of the meanings he had programmed into her magic box .
10 The student often becomes bored with the endless repetition of drills ; he is not necessarily able to transfer the patterns he has practised into creative communication outside a classroom situation ; and he does not necessarily know how and when it is appropriate to use the structures he has practised .
11 From 1865 to 1871 he lived on the estates he had inherited in Scotland , and then spent his last years at Cambridge .
12 He talked wildly about shame and guilt , and how he would give part of the money he 'd inherited to his wife and to you , and use the rest to escape from England with the girl he loved .
13 His mates had all scored and he inexplicably had n't , in spite of the money he 'd blown on all those lime-green cocktails for the bleached slag in the dress with all the red spangles .
14 The money he had inherited with the house just was n't enough .
15 He submitted a bill for all the money he had spent on my upbringing .
16 Debts had swallowed up most of the money he had got for Carinish Court .
17 He intended to use the cash to repay the money he had stolen from the company .
18 The money he had stolen from the gravel pits reposed under his bunk in the houseboat .
19 I could tell you about the money he has lent to people and never got back .
20 The under sheriff must hold on to the balance for 14 days in case any steps should be taken to make the defendant bankrupt , in which case he would have to pay the money he has recovered to the receiver .
21 And there were all the other women he 'd made lucky too — all the hairdressers he 'd flirted with , all the travel agents , florists and girls in bars .
22 As it was , to Pétain , mindful of the chaos he had witnessed on the icy road the day of his arrival , there was room for every possible doubt .
23 The vaults were then changed at night or when the bus had finished service and then were counted by a different means , they were counted by machine coin counters and er so , instead of say erm what , sixty or seventy conductors paying in their money , this was all erm on the bus , so there may have been five or six drivers had worked that bus that day and all the takings he 'd taken during the time was all in this night safe in this vault .
24 Jarvis opened the case he had brought on the vestibule floor , carried the typewriter into Remove , where he put it on one of the desks , and took his clothes upstairs .
25 Groaning , the pain in her lower body almost more than she could bear , she got to her feet , then spat blood , unable to put her hand up to her mouth to feel the damage he had done to her .
26 The plaintiff 's share of the responsibility for the damage he had suffered in the accident arose out of the finding that either he ought to have known that the defendant 's ability to drive was impaired or , more likely , that he had drunk so much himself that he was unable to tell that the defendant 's ability was in fact impaired .
27 In his anguished soliloquy on awaking from what he thinks has only been a dream , we see that the hypocrite has lost for ever the advantage he has had over other people .
28 Perhaps more important , since memories of the bad old days were bound to fade sooner or later , was the progress he had made towards transforming the strong presidency from a crisis expedient into a permanent and widely accepted feature of French political life .
29 He was given no follow-up treatment to continue the progress he had made in the rehabilitation hospital .
30 However , his ‘ homework ’ is strictly limited by the progress he has achieved during his rehabilitation treatment ( p. 134 ) .
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