Example sentences of "he have [vb pp] from [noun prp] " in BNC.

  Next page
No Sentence
1 To ask the Secretary of State for Health what representations he has received from NUPE and COHSE on the patients charter .
2 On three previous occasions , in 1977 , 1981 and 1987 , his requests were denied , but new hopes have been raised by the support and encouragement which he has received from Dr Rita Suessmuth , President of the Bundestag , who must carry a majority among 640 members of the legislative body for ‘ Wrapped Reichstag ’ to be realised .
3 To ask the Secretary of State for the Home Department what representations he has received from Cumbria county council on the question of policing in the county .
4 Shylock describes the persecution he has suffered from Antonio in Act 1 , Scene 3 , lines 102–104 .
5 Like Mr Kinnock , he has travelled from Land 's End to John O'Groats since 1983 in terms of the policies he believes in , but the impression that abides after his speeches is that he stays loyal to ancient socialism in a way that his more revisionist colleagues have abandoned .
6 Xorandor explains that he lives on radioactivity , that he has come from Mars in search of food , and that he has been stealing the waste to feed himself .
7 Thus when the postmistress asks him if he has come from Mars , he answers ‘ yes ’ because she has just told him the story of Merlin that is a local myth .
8 This is true especially of the story of his own call to be a disciple , which he has copied from Mark .
9 This year Bradl has a new two-year contract with HB and he has switched from Michelin to Dunlop tyres .
10 Goram is a self-confessed amalgam of the best bits he has taken from Leighton , Alan Rough , the extrovert personality he replaced at Easter Road , and Alan Hodgkinson , the five times capped former England goalkeeper who has been his mentor since Oldham , and now works with the Scottish team .
11 He has learned from New Zealand and Costa Rica not to say too much too soon .
12 He acknowledges he has learned from Porter 's writing on competitive advantage , but probably speaks for most of his peers when he says : ‘ I do n't read business texts written by academics for the purpose of discovering a direct application that I can use .
13 ‘ Pah , nothing 's left from the previous existence — only the mere lees and dregs of thought , dreams of past time that the creature does not heed , or not half as much as the figments he has derived from Milton !
14 It was Jack Ashdown , and he 'd heard from Lucy again .
15 Er he 'd escaped from Leeds or summat .
16 He 'd begun from Inverness and started to work his way westward , around Beauly Firth and towards the forests of Corriehallie and Lochrosque .
17 Scott seemed satisfied by this and slipped the magazine free from his own pistol , jamming in the full one he 'd taken from Hitch 's Beretta .
18 Hitch reached inside his jacket and touched the butt of the Beretta he 'd taken from Scott .
19 But … she 'd hardly spoken to Adam since the morning he 'd returned from Starr Hills .
20 The reason for their excellent wickets , he said , was that he 'd changed from Mendip loam to Surrey loam .
21 Carver , his executive case on his knees , the bug inside it , thought over what he 'd learned from Evelyn Lennox .
22 He 'd most likely end up eating the grain he 'd nicked from Mrs Wright for the pheasants .
23 Like the time she 'd found Will Pegg 's pockets full of iron nails he 'd filched from Samson .
24 He walked over to the rickety wooden gateway , drawing from his pocket a small jar he had purloined from Mait 's Bagi before Ace had blown it up .
25 Eh er but er he had flown from Latvia .
26 He had emigrated from Hampshire , with 26-year-old girlfriend Tracey Farmer to escape the recession and start a new life .
27 He had spent three years building on the excellent co-operation between the Bureau and the Yard that he had inherited from Darrell Mills .
28 Rance quickly decided that the Executive Council he had inherited from Dorman-Smith was useless while most of the senior British officials seemed to lack any ideas .
29 He had inherited from Walter Luff an undertaking whose proud boast was that it had contributed £454,361 in rate relief during his management .
30 It compounds still further those two legacies so actively conjoined since the previous summer of 1837 : the historical , biogeographical ( including ecological ) concerns that he had inherited from Lyell , and the generational concerns deriving from his study with Grant and subsequent reading in Erasmus Darwin .
  Next page