Example sentences of "[adj] [noun pl] he have [vb pp] [prep] " in BNC.

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1 But what Sheriff Irvine Smith has , with compelling cause shown , denied us in his Introduction he has amply redeemed in the justiciary cases he has placed before us and in his commentary thereon .
2 The loss of such a man at most other clubs would have spelt disaster , but Chapman had foreseen the danger and the solid foundations he had built at the club enabled Arsenal to win another League Championship the following year .
3 The British , Commonwealth and European titles he has won since then were all taken while fighting in London .
4 Will the Prime Minister therefore tell us what specific proposals he has made for supporting economic projects in the republics of the former Soviet Union , particularly in the distribution industries , which are obviously of basic importance to economic growth and to the development of markets ?
5 One of his old associates he had chatted to in the bar a couple of nights previously , had mentioned how much he enjoyed his regular visits to the Turkish baths in Gloucester .
6 On it we normally get the full title and sub-title , the author 's name or pseudonym , his qualifications and , sometimes , the titles of other important or popular books he has written with , at the foot , the publisher 's imprint and , more often than not , the date .
7 He himself was only a little shy — and obviously very proud of the English words he 'd acquired in the few months since his arrival .
8 Erskine , long resident in Stockholm , is known for the warm , humane domestic , public and commercial buildings he has designed in Sweden over the past 50 years .
9 A similar exercise has been undertaken by Karlsson whose work we shall refer to again because of the interesting comments he has made about his observations from a genetics viewpoint .
10 Nicholson brought instant stability to the production and introduced some of the rigid controls he had learned from the Corman modus operandi .
11 Cotton 's greatest interest for the rest of his life was to help young professionals follow and benefit from the high standards he had set for himself .
12 The story was an apparently true one concerning a certain butler who had travelled with his employer to India and served there for many years maintaining amongst the native staff the same high standards he had commanded in England .
13 Whatever sexual imaginings he 'd shaped in the darkness — Judith 's face , Judith 's breasts , belly , sex — all of them had been an illusion .
14 As luck would have it , Jean-Claude found he needed some old scores he had put to one side as they were too heavy to bring along with everything else we had had to load on the motor cycle .
15 A reproduction Cromwellian Clock , made by the Goldsmiths ' and Silversmiths ' Company , was presented to ‘ Monty ’ in recognition of the distinguished services he had rendered to his King and Country , and the inscription included the Arms of Montgomery as well as the Arms of the Borough .
16 The Colonel had recalled exciting nights he had spent in the open , round the naphthalene lamp , enticing and trapping moths ; he had enthused over bits of bone he had excavated in the peat bog .
17 From then on Endill was never again scared by the strange footsteps he had heard for years in the middle of the night .
18 The latest medical theories suggest that Mozart 's last illness had its roots in the various serious infections he had suffered as a child : on the early trip to Paris and London he had contracted rheumatic fever , tonsillitis. and typhoid fever ; in 1167 he had caught smallpox ; and in Italy he seems to have had bronchitis and yellow jaundice .
19 Notwithstanding the two occasions on which he had been tempted to abandon the Army for politics , and the cordial relations he had maintained with the CEDA , Franco was disdainful and suspicious of politicians .
20 Whilst therefore making full allowance for the diversity of gifts God has given to his Church in the varying capacities he has accorded to different members , Paul insists that the Spirit creates unity , and that it is the job of the Christians to keep that unity and not spoil it .
21 Byrnes began to retreat from his unilateral dealings with the USSR , especially when the limited agreements he had concluded in Moscow in December 1945 were sharply criticized back home as a return to appeasement .
22 The slave wars are not to be separated , in Posidonius ' mind , from the civil wars he had seen in his own time .
23 Gould was satisfied with simply selling off the remaining numbers he had bought off Lear .
24 A distinct picture of Anthea Darnell 's fingernails materialised in Montgomery 's mind , the small defects in their pristine surface reflecting the niggling misgivings he had experienced during the interview .
25 The Frenchman 's dark aquiline features and unsmiling silences made him think of history-book pictures he 'd seen of the warrior heroes of ancient Greece and Rome , and the dismay he had felt at first when their car had struck the Annamese villager had increased his sense of awe .
26 Since this was Keith Jones ' last committee meeting , the committee expressed its gratitude for the valuable contributions he had made to the committee .
27 And on a er visit to a museum a few weeks later he also discovered flying boots of exact prints he 'd seen on the wet floor .
28 However , no doubt mollified both by the President 's dramatic decision on Tuesday to announce the release of eight long-term political prisoners and by the urbanity of his style , the archbishop did note that the talks had proceeded in ‘ a far better atmosphere ’ than previous encounters he has had with the government .
29 Wrapped in newspaper were the frozen lumps he had fashioned by stone to the width of the water pipe .
30 It was n't just the terrible things he 'd implied about Isabelle , although , God knew , they were bad enough .
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