Example sentences of "have [verb] he [prep] [verb] [pron] " in BNC.

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1 He has a final interview with Miss Havisham , and forgives her the wrong she has done him in leading him on to believe that she was his benefactor .
2 But Marwood refuses to take issue with Bassett and , instead , has thanked him for furthering his management ambitions .
3 Rod Morris was born in Southampton but his family kept moving around the country , and that continual movement is very likely the cause which has aggravated him into producing his latest body of work , ‘ Planes and Boats and Trains ’ , which was recently exhibited at Sir John Cass School of Art .
4 Rod Morris was born in Southampton but his family kept moving around the country , and that continual movement is very likely the cause which has aggravated him into producing his latest body of work , ‘ Planes and Boats and Trains ’ , which was recently exhibited at Sir John Cass School of Art .
5 They 'd suspected him of rigging her escape , and now their suspicions were confirmed .
6 She 'd taxed him with trading them for snuff , which was his passion , and he 'd not denied it .
7 Imagine , she 'd thanked him for telling her Rob was missing !
8 She 'd goaded him into doing what he 'd done , perhaps even hoping he would take her against her will , she realised in despair .
9 Nobody could have blamed him for trying it on , could they ?
10 Poor Stephen — she should n't have teased him by exaggerating her friendship with Martin the way she had .
11 The meeting with Picasso , which probably took place around the time this picture was being painted or soon after , must have encouraged him in turning his back completely on Fauvism .
12 She would n't have upset him by taking his dog for a walk , that was for sure .
13 Of relics of ‘ Our Henry 's ’ birth , the chateau of Pau keeps a single , peculiar example : the large turtle-shell supposed to have served him for a cradle , once his grandfather had christened him by rubbing his lips with a clove of garlic and a dab of Jurançon wine .
14 Then he read a textbook of hers about the craft of the dramatist and it had stopped him from showing her anything for a year .
15 He was unprepared for the pain the room gave him , the fierce memory of the last time he had been here , when only that impulse of chivalry , or folly , had prevented him from taking her , as he could have done , from making her his own instead of handing her over to whoever had got her now .
16 Only her own determination had prevented him from vomiting it back .
17 Unless it was true , as he 'd alleged , that the women had robbed him before tossing him in the stinking water .
18 The Prime Minister , he said , had entrusted him with delivering her fourth election victory .
19 She had accused him of leading her on .
20 She meant that , once she had talked him into releasing her from this crazy engagement , she would be free to take up her own life once more .
21 The President began the meeting as usual , with a review of the scientific advances of the previous year , naming experts who had helped him in making his list .
22 Luke 's arms came round her as if she had summoned him by saying his name , and she could n't continue .
23 She had been swept along by Alain since her plane landed and now she was about to meet the woman whose glamour had brought her father to France , who had driven him to deserting his own wife and child .
24 Andrew Richens was 17 when he stabbed William Choi , who he claimed had boasted of having sex with his girlfriend and had taunted him by saying she had probably never had a real man before .
25 ’ I had to push him into taking his annual leave .
26 The veneer of sophistication , her throw-away attitude of laissez-faire , had deceived him into believing she had shared his own amoral values .
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