Example sentences of "he have [vb pp] with his " in BNC.

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1 Vic Wilcox asks Brian Everthorpe to stay for a meeting he has arranged with his technical and production managers .
2 The book that he has written with his former research student , a linguist and historian , although concentrating on a remote and antique land , is the first full definition of the scope of this new historical science .
3 He was dropped too early — but instead of sulking he has returned with his old fire .
4 It is that he is criminally insane — unable to stop himself from sexually abusing women he has lured with his position or his charm , and sometimes overpowered with drugs .
5 To ask the Secretary of State for Foreign and Commonwealth Affairs what recent meetings he has had with his EC counterparts to discuss the development of democratic accountability in the European Community .
6 Male homosexuals in a large number of cases , says Freud , do not give up the mother and find another woman as sexual object , but they identify with their mother : ‘ he transforms himself into her and now looks about for objects which can replace his ego for him and on which he can bestow such love and care as he has experienced with his mother ’ .
7 His choice of words shows how thoroughly he has identified with his subject , and for what reason .
8 It had been a present from the colonel — to keep her company , he 'd insisted with his gentle smile .
9 But there was a numb place deep inside , a place he 'd created with his cruelly scathing words , and she gazed back at him with something near loathing as he walked away towards the stairs .
10 There 's no need to worry , ’ she insisted , once he 'd finished with his hideous needle and thread .
11 He lived alone now , in a small house in Highgate which he 'd shared with his wife before she left him .
12 His address book ; the clothes he 'd bought with his own money as opposed to hers ; his spare spectacles ; his cigarettes .
13 He had broken with his family long ago .
14 He said huskily , ‘ Let me , McAllister , ’ and began to unbutton her blouse , ‘ I want to stroke you , McAllister , and not your clothes , ’ and she made no effort to stop him , and when he bent his head to kiss the breasts he had fondled with his hands the cry which she gave was one of pleasure , not fear , for now it was Dr Neil loving her so carefully that the flood of pleasure was almost on her from that alone .
15 He had lived with his past for the best part of fifty years , and his book tells what he had come to know of it over that interval of time , with help from the theories of Marx and Freud .
16 His virginity , his half-shameful fear of her close , warm-smelling , overwhelming femaleness , his social insecurity , born in that small , terraced house near the river at Ely , where he had lived with his widowed mother , nurtured by the desperate contrivings , the small deceptions of respectable poverty , the deprivation that was so much more humiliating than the real poverty of the inner cities .
17 Until then , he had lived with his parents at their home in Princes Risborough .
18 Tonight he had dispensed with his usual practice .
19 Creeping little bastards in the hair of his head and his stomach , and he had gouged with his fingernails at the flesh under his clothes .
20 He stared dully at the hole he had blasted with his shotgun , and saw the red flicker of flames beyond the door .
21 Stanford died 3 November 1904 at ‘ Helens ’ , Sidmouth , Devon , where he had moved with his wife in 1890 .
22 Back then he had argued with his son : had denied Yuan 's insistence that they were the gaolers of Tsao Ch'un 's City , the inheritors of a system which shaped them for ill .
23 Was the fiction of this bit of family life upsetting the delicate balance of connection he had achieved with his separated wife ?
24 But there was somewhere , was n't there , where once , years ago , he had gone with his mother , or someone fairly like his mother , anyway ?
25 They are recalled as somewhat sad , dependent figures : a ‘ poor old fellow ’ who went out to his sister for his meals ; ‘ a right cripple ’ who had been unable to work for over ten years ; ‘ a very old gentleman ’ who scraped together a living by selling vegetables and tomatoes which he grew in his greenhouse , but was ‘ very unhappy ’ because he had quarrelled with his drunken son .
26 Tom Reynolds remembered how he had quarrelled with his father , a quarrel much like the one he was leading up to with Esther Ward .
27 Taking the middle of the handkerchief , Vic drew it up through a hole he had formed with his other hand .
28 Proceeding much as he had done with his houses , Edouard first refurbished them .
29 He could n't remember what he had done with his bike when he got to the Fletchers ' , left it there and collected it next day perhaps , but he could remember most of the rest of it .
30 He let his head roll against the window and she could have believed he was doing something with his eyes to the countryside , the way he had done with his eyebrows to the men .
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