Example sentences of "that he has " in BNC.

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1 The Inland Revenue form R190(SD) contains the certificate and the form requires the donor to state that he satisfies all the conditions relating to Gift Aid ( as to which , see 4 below ) , including the fact that he has paid , or will pay , tax equal to the basic rate on the gross amount of the gift .
2 If he finds it necessary to copy , to study the work of other painters , or any way to seek for help out of himself , he may be sure that he has received nothing of that inspiration .
3 Salim is now homeless in the sense that he has shed an old tendency to nostalgia : ‘ the idea of going home , of leaving , the idea of the other place ’ , he takes to be weakening and destructive .
4 Later in the book Mr Fraser recognises that he has talked both of rubbing out the past and of preserving it : ‘ The aims seem contradictory , do n't they ?
5 She is indeed ready to die , and it is a difficulty that Justin may feel that he has to do the same .
6 T. Behrens gives the impression that he has more to say about himself than the progress of this mad love — to which he did not stand all that close at the time , brother as he was — has allowed him to come up with .
7 The encounter could be read as establishing that he has been silly , while clearing him of a certain … imputation .
8 Jenny understands him to say that he has had trouble on his travels ‘ with the Reds ’ .
9 The Zuckerman books help one to imagine how Roth has faced the reproach that he has derided his family and sold their secrets .
10 There are readers whom , as Zuckerman is the first ( or second ) to acknowledge , he can drive to the complaint that he has sex , and family matters , and Jewish matters , on the brain : ‘ I want him to take his manuscript and mail it to his mother ’ , as I have heard them cry .
11 The man upstairs , the first husband whom Maria is to leave , is not ‘ self-aware ’ — unlike Zuckerman , who declares , on behalf of the self-aware , that he has no self and that the self is a joke .
12 The Primo Levi who is read by Fernanda Eberstadt is a man who is unable to write about Jews — though he does in fact write about them with great sympathy , believers and unbelievers alike — and who has no feeling for people whose background and abilities are different from his own , though the joy of Levi 's work , for other readers , is very often that he has such feelings , that he knows himself to be , while also knowing himself not to be , an ordinary man , a worker , a man who worked as an industrial chemist and who was no less of a worker when he wrote books .
13 A director may have made it plain that he has a definite intention for a character , but the student may not always see this straight away .
14 He is now head chef at a leading law firm with 120 partners based in the City , and feels that he has found his niche .
15 It does not have to be that he has conceived what the French are calling the coup de force for Miss Jonathan . ’
16 Even if you do manage to prove that he has been harassing you , there does n't appear to be much general acceptance of the fact that intimidating someone in this way might actually constitute a serious crime .
17 Also , the pilot will be in very good flying form and his instructor will have made sure that he has not been getting into bad habits .
18 If the subject prefers to look at one stimulus rather than another we can assume that he has detected a difference between them .
19 And no one doubts that he has earned his place among the sport 's leading players .
20 Seems reasonable , except for the fact that he has n't cut the mortises for the mullions .
21 The instance here is of Stavrogin pretending to the provincial governor that he has a secret to communicate to him , and , when the unsuspecting old man ‘ hastily and trustfully ’ inclines his head , seizing his ear in his teeth and holding on to it , biting hard .
22 The narrator objects that he has done nothing .
23 Nor can it be denied that he has done nothing .
24 Yet it is likely that he has imposed a colour-filter on Derrida , which lets through the rational elements and occludes the irrational ones .
25 Already in 1926 ( The New Republic , 30 June ) Tate was obliged — faced with the aridity in diction and imagery of ‘ The Hollow Men ’ — to concede that ‘ It is possible that he has nothing more to say in poetry ’ .
26 For him , to discover a new writer of genius is as satisfying an experience , as it is for a lesser man to believe that he has written a great work of genius himself .
27 Burrows seems to have lived with his material for so long that he has forgotten to throw out enough clues for the rest of us , and there are few hints as to why certain sequences are so important that they should be repeated over and over again But what constantly saves the piece from disappearing into itself is the obliquely moving nature of the central relationship and some patchy but startlingly lovely dance images .
28 The inspired stroke of telling Othello that he has been witness to one of Casio 's incriminatingly erotic dreams is here popped into Iago 's head because Casio does , at one point , actually hug him in his sleep .
29 Although not exactly stuck for words , nothing that he has said has yet entered the language .
30 As a star opera director whose career is becoming increasingly orientated towards the theatre , it is understandable that he has n't often found the time to stray from the great metropolises to mount a production .
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