Example sentences of "he have made " in BNC.

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1 It was n't a sound I ever remembered him having made , but certain things about it made me think it came from Quigley .
2 I thought it was very nice of him to have made friends with me .
3 Living with him had made her feel middle-aged , yet she was still only twenty-two , and it was wonderful to be free again .
4 So Brunner rejected the possibility of an independent natural theology in which man could attain to knowledge of God through the general revelation in nature ; for the defacing of the image of God in him had made that impossible .
5 He had never pretended to love her and it was her misfortune that the time that had meant nothing to him had made her his forever .
6 The splendour of the fourteenth century fan vaulting soaring elegantly , anciently , above him had made no comment .
7 Something unpushable about him had made Davies hesitate , and he 'd been all right , there had been nothing to fear ; he and Davies were friends now .
8 Loving him had made her whole again .
9 ‘ Nick has played good , solid golf under the gun to win five majors while others around him have made their mistakes . ’
10 After all , Mr Yeltsin and Mr Gorbachev before him have made more concessions to the western powers than any Russian leader since Lenin in 1918 accepted the Russo-German treaty of Brest-Litovsk .
11 The Zuckerman books are a medley of differences and affinities between what we are able to infer about Roth 's life and what he has made of it in art .
12 Having done this , after carefully considering his actions , he has made a statement which may well become the accepted ethic of Lakeland/British climbing .
13 In this , of the great poet-critics of the past the one he most nearly resembles is Dryden , whose criticism virtually always comes before us as the preface to a volume of original imaginative writing — including translations which , in this too like Pound , Dryden considers no less ‘ original ’ than poems he has made up for himself .
14 After he has made his first claim for Landor , Pound writes two paragraphs of the sort that have provoked near-apoplexy , because they have not been taken in the spirit that Pound intended :
15 Brian Clough , the Forest manager , said : ‘ His contract was not expiring but he deserved a rise for the contribution he has made over the last 12 months -so he earned himself a new deal . ’
16 Robson , who watched Rocastle last Saturday , said : ‘ He has made a good start to the season .
17 ‘ Perhaps Martin Edwards will admit that he has made a mistake selling to the person he has done and the way in which he has sold it .
18 With The Cook , The Thief , His Wife And Her Lover ( 18 ) he has made a few changes , but certain basic principles hold good : the look of everything is still turned into art history , and the meaning of everything is still turned into nothing , a nothing that sometimes seems despairing and sometimes only smug .
19 But , it may be objected , what of God 's relationship with His creation and the men and women He has made ?
20 But he has made it his business to master the terminology of the economic debate , and applied to the problem an elegant and sophisticated technique of intellectual biography .
21 All this is God 's doing , for he has reconciled us to himself through Jesus Christ ; and he has made us agents of the reconciliation . ’ 2 Corinthians 5:17
22 But it is as a kicker that he has made his name .
23 I recall that two years ago at the NFT he announced that his great ambition as a young man had been to become a movie director : now ( aided by director of photography William Lubtchansky and production designer Chloe Obolensky ) he has made a landmark television film .
24 He has made several big mistakes .
25 And he has made it clear that an all-German election should be held next year at the earliest , not as a quick substitute for the West German one in December .
26 And he has made a lot of easy promises that he has not yet had to keep .
27 He has made mistakes , but nobody is more committed to opening up Australia 's still-stuffy economy .
28 First , we may think of the traditional or even oldfashioned type of man with tangible material things which belong to him — land and houses , horses and cattle , furniture and jewellery and pictures — things which he may use or destroy ( so far as that is physically possible ) ; from which he may exclude others ; which he may sell or give away or bequeath ; which , if he has made no disposition of them , will pass on his death to persons related to him .
29 If he has used it to swell his bank balance , it will be presumed that , in drawing on that balance , he has drawn out his own money before touching trust money ; if he has made an investment with trust money — even an investment which is itself a breach of trust — that investment is still trust property , to which the trustees ’ creditors have no claim .
30 No manager , in any half-decent company , is able to get away with claiming that he has made all the improvements it is possible to make .
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