Example sentences of "he have [adv] [vb pp] [adv] the " in BNC.
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1 | He has n't given up the practice but he 's , he 's still a partner and he does a large weekend duty for us all |
2 | Ludens will bring Marcus here , he should show up any moment , I hope he has n't messed up the car ! ’ |
3 | he has n't broken down the mileage into how it 's assigned . |
4 | He has already ruled out the forcing of a by-election by the elevation of a senior Tory MP to the Lords . |
5 | He has already put up the four corner posts . |
6 | He has also taken up the case for a market-orientated reform , which has been started , but with far less vigour . |
7 | He has not given up the running battle between them over the question of form , which started out with his victory on accommodation . |
8 | It might even be Mr Ozal himself ( he has not ruled out the idea of standing ) , but one of his associates seems a likelier choice . |
9 | Again , he has accurately written down the sound of the word . |
10 | Neumeier has gone right to the heart of Shakespeare 's great work , and he has brilliantly chosen both the dance styles and the music to suit the three dramatic groupings of the play . |
11 | Something must have told him that he 'd not said quite the right thing , for he looked at Zeinab uneasily afterwards . |
12 | Please do not do er what a young man did the other day went to his house , he was the victim of a burglary , he very proudly announced that he 'd fitted one of these locks to his front door when we saw how he 'd fitted it , he 'd actually chiselled out the majority of the side of his door in and filled it up with Polyfilla ! |
13 | But he had skilfully pacified even the most vociferous of dissenters . |
14 | He had notionally divided up the Iranian government into a fanatic wing , an extremely fanatic wing , a bridge group and a ‘ right-wing group ’ that leaned towards the West . |
15 | Some would have said that he had not taken even the first step , since he had been invested irregularly with his pastoral staff by the king . |
16 | The archbishop of Besançon was summoned through the bishop of Langres ( an intentional slight ) for allowing papal messengers to be captured ; the bishop of Speyer on the same grounds and also for sending one messenger to the gallows ; the archbishop of Tarentaise for crowning Philip ; and the bishop of Passau , who had probably been the draughtsman of the Staufen protest , had a long series of charges brought against him — he had not delivered two million marks to the king of Hungary , he had not paid back the money given him by Richard I for his release — indeed , his crimes were so great , the letter said , that he could have been punished without trial . |
17 | He had thus paid off the princes and the pope . |
18 | Rory had driven up and slipped into her bed like lightning , because he had already cooked up the plan to try and entice Jessica Roberts to go with him to Galway , and needed to sweeten Rosie for another evening 's absence . |
19 | A woman spends many years charring in Cremona ; she saves all her money to buy an apartment for her son when he gets married ; her no-good husband , the boy 's father , reappears after years and demands assistance ; she refuses ; when the son is engaged , she relents and negotiates subsidies to her ex-husband , for a suit , a car , a wedding-present ; she organizes a big reception to which she invites all her former employers ; nobody comes except a tennis-star ; there is no sign of the husband ; her lawyer tells her that the girl her son is marrying is her husband 's mistress and that he had already taken over the apartment ; she reflects a moment and decides to carry on with the reception , everything is all right , ‘ if no one notices anything , it is as though nothing has happened ’ ; passers-by are invited to join the wedding-party , which they happily do because the tennis-star is present ; the husband turns up in his new car ; no one takes any notice of him because no one knows who he is , except for the dealer he sometimes does jobs for , who tells him all new cars lose half their value as soon as they are bought and end up on the scrapheap anyway . |
20 | If he had n't jumped then the car would have hit him . |
21 | He did n't make it to the course on the next day , was sacked , and always maintained that if he had n't given up the drink for those ten days or so and ‘ dried out ’ he would not have got so drunk , would have been on the course at the appointed time , would not have lost his job , and would have have carried for yet another Open Champion . |
22 | He had foolishly picked up the trolleys from a nearby supermarket and threw them . |
23 | There was , Henry felt , something rather unsavoury about Maltby. perhaps that was why he had never worked up the notes he had made on the case . |
24 | Clenching his teeth , George had to remind himself that he had now got just the endorsement he wanted . |
25 | Well he 's just locked up the car ooh |