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

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1 One single man lived in lodgings and his landlady was in the habit of putting in a pudding basin the lunch she had prepared for that day , for him to have warmed up on the morrow .
2 In the end , he has lost out on the grounds of inferior physique .
3 Unmistakably , though , he has come down on the side of the demonstrators and against Erich Honecker , the East German leader .
4 He has published widely on the theme of science policy and the politics of economic reform in the USSR , and has advised the House of Commons Foreign Affairs Committee and the Committee on Science and Technology about recent developments in the USSR .
5 Well I wondered if he 'd wa he 'd gone out on the Nottingham cos I wondered what would happen to the mascot was he shot the mascot , after the the game ?
6 He 'd danced here on the same legs that now lay dead beneath him , while Sartori had told him how he planned to take this wretched Dominion , and build in its midst a city that would shame Babylon ; danced for sheer exuberance , knowing his Maestro was a great man , and had it in his power to change the world .
7 I rushed him to hospital and the doctor asked how it was done and I said he 'd fallen over on the step .
8 Van Gelder had n't made any mistakes about her , Talbot thought , except that he 'd missed out on the wide green eyes and a rather bewitching smile .
9 Mind , he 'd crashed in on the situation pretty damn quickly , stepping in and being nice to her almost before she had dried her eyes , trying to get her on the rebound .
10 This year he had begun brilliantly on the Safari circuit in Africa , had won two tournaments and headed their Order of Merit .
11 When he started to his feet he had to lean hard on the arm of the chair while a moment of dizziness passed .
12 This left Briton Derek Warwick , in a Footwork , in seventh place after he had spun off on the final lap in the rain .
13 But here was a youth so far ahead of his time that if he had turned up on the streets of London sixty or seventy years later , he would still have been recognised as a sure sign of an alarmingly unrivalled degeneration among the young .
14 He had stopped twice on the way up , at Norman Cross for lunch at the Merrie England cafe , and at Dave 's Diner near Retford for a cup of tea .
15 Nought but a rabble he had gathered together on the fair island that lies to the east — of buccaneers and booty hunters and ruffianly runaways from the slaveships that are plying these waters most usefully .
16 He had withdrawn there on the advice of several people ( including myself ) that Downing Street was an impossible place for anyone whose curiosity extended to seeing every telegram that came in at whatever time of the day or night .
17 Crucial to the conviction was evidence from Pederick , who had , at his own trial , admitted planting the bomb and further claimed at Anderson 's trial that he had done so on the latter 's instructions .
18 He was around somewhere unless he had ridden out on the common .
19 Then he remembered the time that he had walked in on the Politburo meeting and arrested Beria .
20 The young art student was about nineteen when he died ; he had worked hard on the dramatic murals in the studio and then he tried mixing drugs with drink and that was fatal .
21 The voice belonged to George , he had drawn up on the other side of the road , and as I walked towards him his voice was getting impatient .
22 Springfield himself was standing beside the open door of his car , which he had drawn up on the verge opposite the gates , angled so its headlights were bathing them in a pool of bright luminescence .
23 When she 'd closed the case he had sunk back on the pillow , a thin smile on his face , his lips tinged with yellow .
24 Charles had long been interested in architecture — he had grown up with beautiful buildings and visited hundreds more all over the world ; he had read extensively on the subject and , by the very nature of the job , had seen a multitude of buildings , especially in the inner cities , that not only looked ghastly , but that people clearly found ghastly to live in .
25 He had settled down on the settee , watching her every move as she 'd put the kettle on and taken salad and cold meat from the fridge .
26 Here is Tufnell coming up again , bowls over and outside the off stump , and that one goes to Robin Smith , and he 's hit somewhere on the boot and ricochets off down the pitch .
27 He 's gone out on the razzle again . ’
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