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

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1 But he has remained in contact with the motor racing as a broadcaster and interviewer .
2 He has appeared in charity shows at the club for more than 20 years and we well-known throughout the area for his untiring efforts for worthy causes .
3 I am not in the least surprised that he has fallen in love with you . ’
4 I expect he has fallen in love .
5 He has conquered in earth 's name .
6 To ask the Chancellor of the Exchequer what representations he has received in favour of taxation policies to benefit the environment ; and if he will make a statement .
7 The value transferred is to be reduced by the value of any other interest in possession in the property to which the beneficiary becomes entitled at the same time or by the amount of any consideration in money or money 's worth which he has received in respect of the determination or disposal .
8 The rate of tax payable is arrived at by reference to the total of that value and the value of any previous chargeable transfers made by the beneficiary , but that value is to be reduced by the value of any other interest in possession in the property to which he becomes entitled at the same time or by the amount of any consideration in money or money 's worth which he has received in respect of the termination or disposal of the interest .
9 To ask the Secretary of State for Health what representations he has received in connection with applications for national health service trust status from within the Sheffield health authority .
10 To ask the Secretary of State for Education and Science what recent representations he has received in connection with state schools in west Norfolk .
11 As Lord Denning said in Fraser v Evans : No person is permitted to divulge to the world information which he has received in confidence , unless he has just cause or excuse for doing so .
12 As I understood the submission , the Attorney-General was not contending that the use of Parliamentary material by the courts for the purposes of construction would constitute an ‘ impeachment ’ of freedom of speech since impeachment is limited to cases where a Member of Parliament is sought to be made liable , either in criminal or civil proceeding , for what he has said in Parliament , e.g. , by criminal prosecution , by action for libel or by seeking to prove malice on the basis of such words .
13 If the seller honours the express remedies , the buyer will have to prove any loss that he has suffered in addition to that covered by the clause , subject to the ordinary common law rules relating to remoteness .
14 However , the dividing line between what is and what is not permissible is often difficult to draw , as Maugham LJ illustrated in the Wessex Dairies case : … although the servant is not entitled to make use of information which he has obtained in confidence in his master 's service he is entitled to make use of the knowledge and skill which he acquired while in that service , including knowledge and skill directly obtained from the master in teaching him his business .
15 I think the critical point is how much he has lost in pace and whether those other attributes are in decline .
16 One former employee at Church House recalls occasions when he has intervened in staffing decisions more properly the sphere of General Synod on the basis that it is he who writes the cheques .
17 He has written in reference to a property in Hoo , " This is owned by Mr Henry Golding of Upper Halling who we find is of Langridge Manor " .
18 He said : ‘ I 'm delighted with the work he has done in training and the commitment he has shown when I have asked him to play . ’
19 And just think of the calculations involved when a fielder runs to catch a cricket ball — he does n't necessarily realise he is doing it but he has to work out how high the ball is , how fast it is travelling , its precise direction and how quickly he has to run in order to catch it .
20 A reader from a common law background is often puzzled by this , because it looks like the single concept of ‘ service ’ with which he is familiar ; he has to keep in mind the civil law distinction between more and less solemn modes .
21 He has sung in church choirs and is a tenor with Darlington Choral Society .
22 Since the beginning he has changed in appearance , now covered by war-paint he has lost his identification as head chorister and is now head hunter .
23 But he has agreed in principle to take the club over .
24 Of course , in those situations where the buyer can and does accept part and reject part of the goods ( i.e. where section 30 applies or where the contract is severable , see paragraphs 11–07 and 11–08 above ) , he is entitled to recover any part of the price that he has paid in respect of the rejected part of the goods .
25 Most people will welcome the good long trip he has had in return . ’
26 Mearns reports that he has measured in excess of 1 volt of stray radio transmissions coming from a single microprocessor .
27 A barrister who applies for any office may reckon as part of his qualification period any time he has spent in practice or in employment as a solicitor .
28 Does he accept that it is largely due to the regulatory framework that he has put in place that the activities of , for example , the Aylesbury Group have now been accepted for the investors compensation scheme ?
29 He 'd lived in thestreet for thirty two years … and worked as a scout or college servant at Trinity College .
30 What however he did seek to do , starting from about nineteen-hundred erm and ten , or nineteen-twelve , was to apply the same methodological procedures which he 'd applied in mathematics , to a range of philosophical problems .
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