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

  Next page
No Sentence
1 Unless you 're like my Uncle Joe — a fox got his best foot , 'e 'ad to have a wooden leg , 'e was livid . ’
2 And presumably whatever it was the GP had give him has had tha , upset that thrombosis again .
3 Also I do n't want him to try to have it off with someone else .
4 Everything around him seemed to have grown bigger ( just like Alice in Wonderland , in n it ? ) .
5 His long bushy eyebrows , mingling with his coarse black hairline , made him appear to have no forehead at all .
6 Considering how closely the band had worked with Charman over the past three years , their method of dismissing him seems to have been unduly formal in the circumstances .
7 The money 's mostly there , but the spirit in him seems to have been leaking away .
8 Even in such an early case as Morris ( Herbert ) Ltd v Saxelby [ 1916 ] 1 AC 688 the plaintiffs abandoned a claim based on an express restraint because , as Lord Atkinson said , the clause prevented the defendant using " … in the service of some other employer that skill and knowledge which he had acquired by the exercise of his own mental faculties on what he had seen , heard , and had experience of in … employment … " ( see also Leng ( Sir WC ) & Co Ltd v Andrews [ 1909 ] 1 Ch 763 where it was held , inter alia , that the defendant was entitled to use his acquired skill and knowledge for the benefit of himself and the benefit of the public who gained the advantage of him having had such admirable instruction ) .
9 Mm saw him coming have to get it cos Neil 's mum was cross about it .
10 No doubt all those of us who saw him play have treasured memories of particular occasions when John Jackson performed as a man inspired to keep Palace 's goal intact .
11 John Cleese and Eric Idle who had both been at Cambridge with him had had no idea .
12 Why did this man he had just begun to believe had no interest in him have to have chosen that book among the dozens of others ?
13 almost every he pass he made had an incorrect address — when back at the side he looked somehow better — a good thing to get £500,000 for the guy if plays like that all the time .
14 He made to have another look at the distant diner .
15 Leeds worked hard to use the sources to provide a chronology of the development of brooch types ( 1933 ) and the extremely dubious assumptions he made have coloured a great deal of thinking to this day .
16 The Rhodian aristocratic merchants among whom he lived had hierarchy , but not extravagance .
17 The new renown of Walter Machin and the heady publicity which had resulted for the town in which he lived had suggested to the Arts Club committee ( a mixture of the local genteel and the local far left ) that a retrospective of the work of his stepson might neatly capitalize on the widespread interest .
18 Would he 've had time to take it home in between stealing it and me finding him ?
19 I refused to believe that he chanced to have the same name as the previous tenants of the cottage — unless he himself was the previous tenant , and had for some reason returned to Moila without wanting to be known ?
20 We reached the low white picket-fence , the only insulation from his subjects that he cared to have .
21 On the other hand , he had the last word whenever he cared to have it , not just on foreign or defence policy but on any aspect of policy .
22 The goods to he sold had been piled up on the stairs where once " the possessions " had been piled ; bottles of jam and honey , heaps of hermetically sealed provisions , bottles of wine , cakes of chocolate pliable with the heat , tins of biscuits and even a few mouldy hams had been stacked against the splintered stumps which were all that now remained of the banisters Fleury had found so elegant the first evening he had entered the Residency .
23 He was simply lucky , perhaps , that the land which he sold had been allocated for residential purposes in a period when a new suburban city was coming into being .
24 He goes I ai n't scared of no bear ! and he goes had !
25 Imagine his surprise , therefore , when he discovered that not a single German he met had ever been in the Nazi Party , let alone had even heard of a concentration camp .
26 This point comes out most explicitly in Le Roy Ladurie 's work on Languedoc , where the explanations he offers have two kinds of appeal .
27 He expected to have to face an immediate follow-up attack , but nothing of the sort happened .
28 In those judgements the opinion of those he represents has no claim over him .
29 He does not usually do so unless he or a section of the public which he represents has some special interest to protect , in enforcing that particular law , that is not shared by the public at large .
30 He admitted having tried cocaine but said it did not seem to do much for him ; cocaine was in ‘ because the chicks dig it sexually ’ .
  Next page