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

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1 The answer that he gave my hon. Friend the Member for Dover ( Mr. Shaw ) and the answer that he has just given have comprehensively shot a number of foxes , but one is still up and running .
2 But since the marriage split was announced in March , he has carefully avoided seeking out the company of other women , and has concentrated instead on seeing as much of his children as possible .
3 He has only come to appreciate properly the importance of loving discipline and the need for obedience since he and Maggie have had children themselves .
4 No sooner was he in the sport than he was already scheming to make his first million ; he has never stopped scheming since , to make many more than the first .
5 To a degree unknown in any other use of language he finds himself not only attending to what is said but simultaneously hearing the words as textures of vowels and consonants , noting rhythm , rhyme , assonance ; meanings refuse to be tied down , disclose nuances and associations of which he has never been conscious ; sights and sounds which he has never heeded become sensuously precise and vivid in imagination ; emotion assumes a peculiar lucidity , undisguised by what he habitually feels or has been taught that he ought to feel ; truths about life and death , which he follows social convention in systematically evading , stand out as simple and unchallengeable .
6 Winning trainer Tim Forster said : ‘ I am very pleased with Cherrykino , this is the first time he has really had to race over fences .
7 And if , for some reason , he has really chosen to drop out for a while , he would n't be grateful for too much fuss , would he ? ’
8 However , it must be pointed out that what he has consistently proposed does not require the arts to be subjected to ‘ scientific or quasi-scientific ’ forms of measurement .
9 He 'd just stopped going back for more .
10 And I ha I was n't very familiar with Nottingham , then , but I went and erm we crossed this park , and it was at a big house , there , tailors were always in rather out of the way places , and er he 'd just got fixed up .
11 The coverboy faced a civil suit from the parents of a sixteen-year-old girl he 'd foolishly videoed making out with a women in his hotel bedroom .
12 He 'd then had to drive back down to Harlow again the following morning to sort out further problems with the system .
13 Well , my gran had told me that she 'd gone down to see her friends who 'd get the Brown Lion after them by this time and er I decided to go down and tell them as I could see if they had n't got the radio on they would n't have known so as I walked from Burchells down Road I could see doors throwing open lights were coming on , people were coming out in the street and dancing and I got round down to the Brown Lion and it was all in darkness , and I rang the bell on the side door and I heard a few bumps and bangs and Mr who 'd kept it then came to the door , and I said do you know the war 's over and er he said oh no come on in that 's w now his son was a prisoner of war and they had been , he 'd continually tried to escape so much that he had his photograph taken in the Sunday paper , the , the Germans had had kept chaining him to the wall and other prisoners , other soldiers had got these photographs of him and smuggled them out and got them back to England , to the nearest papers , and er he he 'd said to my nan cos he knew she 'd always worked behind the bar , he said will you serve if I open the pub now , which was about eleven o'clock at night and she said yes of course , and the they opened the Brown Lion at about eleven o'clock at night in next to no time the place was full of people drinking , celebrating and of course the next day was really it .
14 ROBBIE When it all happened , when I got thrown out of the school , he said he 'd never wanted to adopt anyway , it was my mother 's idea , not his , it was to make her happy .
15 He had briefly considered going out fighting anyway , but had been held back by the thought that he should deal with those immediately responsible for his predicament .
16 He kept remarking on Jeremy 's resourcefulness : shreds of silver indicated that he had used his survival blanket , and he had also stuffed leaves down his trousers for insulation .
17 The best moment on ‘ Strangeways , Here We Come ’ was , strangely , the most obvious statement Morrissey ever made in a lyric , ‘ Paint A Vulgar Picture ’ offered no new insights to the tacky edge of such a subject , but it did sound as though he had finally decided to cast away all the ambiguity of his writing and head , simplistically , for the jugular .
18 But the fact that , in the face of the overpowering evidence against the addiction , he had finally managed to give up all that time ago , combined with the fact that the pain was in the shoulder blade and not the chest , had contributed to putting me off the scent .
19 He had not found a replacement for Lady Cross , he had just had to pay more than £40,000 in back rent and new lease arrangements and the business was not doing well .
20 The things she had heard Jack say after a favourite that he had carefully arranged to get well stuffed , as he put it , promptly went and won .
21 When she had revealed that she was staying here , he had simply decided to hook up and join on .
22 He had badly wanted to sign off with a first victory in Adelaide and a record 10th in a single season .
23 His best friend did not go to the funeral because he had already decided to go on a day trip to France !
24 In 1980 retailer Paul Smith owned one shop in Covent Garden ( the first clothing shop in the area ) and one in Nottingham , and he had already started selling abroad .
25 as if every sentence he had ever written had not cried out to the heavens that the man had as much integrity as a rotten tree-trunk .
26 After that particular evening he had often volunteered to try again with the bathing , if halfheartedly , but seemed happy to be refused , though he was more confident about cooking the evening meal .
27 He had reluctantly agreed to go home .
28 When Ma died , he had always planned to break away completely , give up this life and build a new one .
29 He had always liked slipping away from things .
30 But he had always chosen to stand back ; to be busy .
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