Example sentences of "he have [prep] " in BNC.

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1 But with him having on this side , because he 's so blooming awkward he 's been pressing the play switch and of course , so the tapes been turning round , have n't bothered to che , so you know , he was sort of saying well well play that tape and I 'll write their names down of the people as they speak , just the first names , you know so there 's loads of
2 I remembered him having in my school library
3 And , in any case such dual commitment Leonard could not share , commitment for him had to be the expression of what drove him ; he was obsessive about his poetry and his life in art .
4 Anything handed to him had to be wrapped in Kleenex tissues .
5 The basis of Pippin 's support was narrow , but its geography meant that Louis 's autumn campaign against him had to be fought in difficult terrain : this part of Aquitaine was a region of hills and crags , deeply-wooded , and crossed by great rivers that impeded north-south communications .
6 The car delivered to him had in fact done a considerable mileage .
7 Even the two youths who had attacked him had by now disappeared from view .
8 The minister himself recognizes this portrait but delights in the political clout he has as the treasury man on many such committees , able to range over the whole field of policy .
9 Like Lawrence of Arabia going up and down the majestic sand dunes , he has over the years risen to great heights , and plummeted to great depths .
10 Robert Grosvenor is one of those artists who give new meaning to the term ‘ raw material ’ , using as he has over the years wooden beams — stacked , splintered , split and variously arrayed over the floor .
11 I see it 's a sort of tyranny he has over me .
12 Grayling reckons that he has about another two years of research to do before he can come up with a conclusive report .
13 Second , he has to be a prolific print-maker , and the prints themselves , though perhaps individually rare , must collectively be in reasonably good supply .
14 He has to .
15 His sight is improving but he has to be helped to cross roads .
16 And , purely to keep the story progressing , he has to be one of the laziest criminals in screen history , scattering clues with such recklessness that he seems subconsciously determined to be discovered .
17 ‘ Everything around playing has to be organised very carefully and he has to be mature in choosing the right time to play off the court .
18 He has to be heading for Holland , Germany or France … ’
19 Until he can hold himself safely in the correct positions without increasing his spasticity when he is lying down , sitting , standing , or walking , he has to be helped to move in every situation .
20 He has to be able to sit upright in his chair using his trunk muscles , without pulling or pushing himself up using his unaffected arm .
21 He has to be able to reduce the tension ( technically tonus ) in his muscles before he can make controlled movements .
22 One important goal for the patient is walking , but he has to be ready before he tries .
23 When Milton is resting he is turned out during the day , but he has to be put in a field without much grass because he is incurably greedy and , given the opportunity , gets very fat in no time at all .
24 But he can turn his mind to detailed needs , like pensions , if he has to .
25 ‘ He 's just become more and more difficult to manage — he wanders , and he has to be kept clean …
26 Professor Miller , for such he has to be called for identification purposes , was first asked to give a definition of what psychology was , though the other Miller probably knew what the answer would be .
27 Frequently , moreover , there appears to be little concern that advice should be available to the teacher or headmaster , to ensure that he uses what few resources he has to best effect .
28 He detests travelling alone , he is impossible to clip unless doped , he loathes vets and injections ( ‘ We can just about get a needle into a vein now he 's sixteen … ’ and he has to be sedated for his teeth to be rasped .
29 ‘ If he has to be tied in a sack and dragged , I 'll have him down . ’
30 But as Winch points out , Mill 's assumption separates the person who acts from the world in which he acts , hence , in order for a person to act morally , he has to be shown that it is worthwhile for him to act morally .
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