Example sentences of "[is] [pron] he [vb -s] [vb pp] " in BNC.
Next pageNo | Sentence |
---|---|
1 | This is something he has carried in a big way into his later professional life . |
2 | It is something he has contemplated privately before ; the temptation was this time , I suspect , to great to resist . |
3 | ‘ It 's something he 's had for some time , but I was always going to play him despite the trouble and the fact he 's one booking away from a ban . ’ |
4 | ‘ That 's what he gets paid for but it 's giving me more grey hairs . ’ |
5 | Well that 's what he 's done . |
6 | You see that 's what he 's done . |
7 | That 's what he 's done is it ? |
8 | Which is a good thing because that 's what he 's done in our lives . |
9 | That 's what he 's done in the life of the human race . |
10 | And that 's what he 's done is n't it ? |
11 | Groa said , ‘ If that 's what he 's gone to Kinrimund for , then I wish I 'd known . |
12 | I think that 's what he 's gone down for I think |
13 | Well that 's what he 's said . |
14 | That 's what he 's had before . |
15 | That 's what he 's got to live with . |
16 | It 's what he 's got against Mrs Gotobed , when you come down to it . |
17 | ‘ That 's what he 's got to tell us , ’ Naseby retorted , coming back like Jem Mace . |
18 | The middle child is severely disabled and necessary d adaptations would cost him three thousand seven hundred , that 's what he 's got ta find , and he can not afford it , he ca n't afford to borrow that . |
19 | Oh the Toshiba , the Toshiba transformers , that 's what he 's got a good range of and he 's written down |
20 | I said that 's what he 's got |
21 | For you know , this is what he has said ever since that day . |
22 | The contract is what he has said in his word . |
23 | Bill Clinton was born in the town of Hope and that is what he has given the American people . |
24 | ’ And that is what he has done . |
25 | Diversity is what he has sought all his life . |
26 | Also , and perhaps to a greater extent , a man is what he has smelt : later in the novel Raskolnikov gives the police-station smell as the reason for the suspicious circumstance of his fainting , which is neither the whole truth nor a straight lie but the blending of the guilty man with the Poison of the city . |
27 | I can assure him that fair play is what he has got in this case . |
28 | this is what he 's got left |