Example sentences of "[adv] a [noun sg] he have " in BNC.

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1 ‘ It was only an idea he had , based on the way Robert has been behaving for some time .
2 But that was just a hope he 'd been tossing at me for a couple of years without any interest from me .
3 He put aside a newspaper he 'd been going to read and jumped out of his cab .
4 After two major operations , Gloria could no longer have children , but one day Saul brought home a baby he had found abandoned on the mud-flats at low tide .
5 Hepworth gives an account of the process of developing a script that reveals how undynamic was his approach to screenwriting , as well as how low a regard he had for writers :
6 There is also a fear he has hamstring trouble .
7 And Bassett claimed : ‘ Brian 's union role is clearly a cross he has to bear because some managers simply do n't seem to want the PFA chairman on their books .
8 For about a year he 's been analysing abduction experiences , with the aim of putting together a psycho-social profile of the classic victim .
9 and er , this is what I , this is what I wanted , to tie to the flagpole and left him there for about an hour he had his pasting as well .
10 Gloucester 's petition embodies the only surviving details of his side of the agreement , which are , however , too vague for one to be sure how hard a bargain he had driven .
11 Gloucester 's petition embodies the only surviving details of his side of the agreement , which are , however , too vague for one to be sure how hard a bargain he had driven .
12 ‘ It 's quite a mess he 's got you into , is n't it ? ’
13 For almost a decade he has led a series of protest demonstrations outside abortion clinics throughout England , running foul of the law on countless occasions .
14 As Mr Crump meandered away on a line his wife had drawn for him and in which he half-believed , John-Augustus recalled vividly a discussion he had overheard in the stable-yard earlier that morning .
15 He was reading once again a letter he had received three days ago .
16 Having read again a book he had admired when studying at Edinburgh , a book much concerned with precisely such comparisons and contrasts — his grandfather Brasmus Darwin 's Zoönomia ( 1794–6 ) — he was soon taking its title for the opening heading of his Notebook B , where he was now to pursue his own inquiry into ‘ the laws of life ’ .
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