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

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1 It seems that he speaks no English although he has lived in this country for some time ; he is in fact Italian by birth .
2 For me , it was as much a personal triumph for the coach , Ian McGeechan , as anybody else , because of what he has achieved with this side in such a short space of time .
3 Dalian , who has scored in 12 of the 22 Villa games he has played in this season , explained : ‘ When I came back from Spain a big adjustment had to be made .
4 Dalian , who has scored in 12 of the 22 Villa games he has played in this season , explained : ‘ When I came back from Spain a big adjustment had to be made .
5 He turns his back upon the life he has led in this society .
6 The table he has built on this plan — only a mock-up as yet — is in two halves , each with a half circle cut out .
7 Many generous and warm tributes have been paid to my right hon. Friend the Member for Worcester ( Mr. Walker ) for not only his speech but the massive contribution that he has made to this Parliament and our country during the last generation .
8 And you have Rochester who has erm he 's not exactly been a degenerate and he has shown some restraint , he has cared for this wife , he 's brought her home .
9 He has come to this conclusion after studying teeth from 124 individuals in a pre-agricultural group dating from 1000 BC to AD 1150 and 188 individuals from an agricultural group dating from AD 1150 to AD 1550 .
10 I can assure him that fair play is what he has got in this case .
11 He has opted for this solution to the problem of his masterpieces in storage .
12 They 'd no internal passports in this tiny country , but from what he 'd seen of this building they had computers the like of which the Leningrad Militia could only dream about .
13 He 'd ducked into this bar for a stiffener , something to calm his nerves .
14 and what he 'd done to this pillow was no one 's business .
15 At least he 'd fallen off this side of the wall , he would n't have to jump it again .
16 Though he 'd driven through this area many times — he had a warehouse in the neighbourhood — he recognized none of it .
17 Estabrook watched the smoke drift up over the assassin 's grey eyes , and before he could prevent himself he was telling his story , the rules he 'd drawn for this exchange forgotten .
18 ‘ But if he 'd known of this outrage , ’ said Philip , looking from one to the other of them with searching eyes , ‘ the boy would have told me in Isambard 's presence .
19 ‘ Poor Tom would have been so very unhappy if he 'd known of this situation , ’ she 'd sniffed while fumbling for a handkerchief .
20 He wished he 'd thought to put shoes on before he 'd started on this piece of nonsense ; feet felt like blocks of ice .
21 The branch he 'd climbed over this morning that had been tom down in the wind was moving , shaking violently .
22 In cross examination he accepted that there was no such reference in any report he had written in this case and agreed that quote , I do n't think I 've discussed Cheshire Homes before today , unquote .
23 He had hoped by this gesture to spare his people the customary vengeance which the Turks exacted indiscriminately against the population when Serbs defied them .
24 It was less than a year since he had marched into this office , having forsaken the job of Director General of the Security Service for what he regarded as a promotion , while the men of Century recoiled at what they saw as a political insult .
25 He also said that the envelope the Brownie had kindly picked up had dropped from the Earl 's pocket without being noticed by him , and that as the Brownie was so kind as to share her sweets with him the Earl was sending a tin of his own , which he felt sure from what he had seen of this Brownie would find their way into the mouths of all the other Brownies in the Pack too .
26 A spokesman for the British Field Sports Society said it was the first time he had heard of this happening ; which prompted Chapman Pincher to write in saying that the same thing had happened to him in 1961 ( Daily Telegraph , 21 and 24 December 1987 ) .
27 Corbett remembered he had heard of this type of man , an ‘ Albus ’ , an all-white man or albino .
28 So many times he had padded across this bedroom to go to Abigail that he knew it perfectly in the dark , only requiring to hold his hands out before him and , like a blind man , feel the bevelled comer of the wardrobe , the lacquered wicker of a chair back , the top of the radiator , cold at this hour , the glass sphere of the door knob .
29 He had searched for this assassin by silent threat and bribery but so far had discovered nothing .
30 He also spoke of the motivation and enjoyment he had derived from Young Enterprise and the confidence he had gained from this knowledge that he did possess significant , relevant abilities school just had not teased them out before .
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