Example sentences of "he have [vb pp] [adv] from [art] " in BNC.

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1 The citation for his award read : ‘ Throughout the tour he has led right from the front , exercising all the energy , enthusiasm , charm and courage in his possession . ’
2 The citation read : ‘ Throughout the tour he has led right from the front , exercising all the energy , enthusiasm , charm and courage in his possession .
3 He has seen right from the start that the majority of Germans wanted unification and that the pace of events was dictating a much more rapid move towards unification than most people , either inside , and certainly on the outside , had realised , and he put all his authority into the campaign , campaigned extremely effectively and has had a ringing endorsement .
4 But when he comes to the foot of the mountain and sees the worship of the calf for himself , we hear the sound of his anger too , and see him smashing the tablets of stone that he has brought down from the summit inscribed with God 's torah .
5 In 1856 he exhibits on his lawn a stuffed crocodile he has brought back from the East : enabling it to bask in the sun again for the first time in 3,000 years .
6 This is afterwards , when he has got up from the couch , when he 's making a date for the next appointment and putting on his overcoat in the hall , returning to his ordinary guarded self before he walks out on to the street .
7 He has acted thus from the soundest of motives , being determined to ensure the safety of his sovereign and nephew — his brother 's son .
8 If he 'd been able to keep from gloating , she 'd have ended up in his bed , which was what he 'd intended right from the beginning .
9 They reckon there was a load of fallen branches lying under the air shaft before we pushed the guy down it ; according to the young cop who first went down it looked like he 'd crawled out from the middle of the pile .
10 Besides these photographs were Pedro 's polo helmet , which now had a map of the Malvinas stamped on the front ( which Angel always wore in matches ) , and a jar of earth he 'd dug up from the Islands on the day he 'd been sent home as a prisoner of war .
11 They bartered their grain for the salt he 'd brought back from the border , where he traded with Tibetans who 'd scraped it from the arid salt-lakes and carried it south on yaks across the windswept dust-blown plateau lands .
12 Rebel was racing after another lamb he 'd steered away from the main flock .
13 Horowitz nodded as he followed Hendrix out of the cabin , carrying the case he 'd picked up from the Frankfurt villa in one hand , his executive case in the other .
14 No dog , he noticed , but Cara 's son , the silent child who had always made him feel so ill at ease , still sitting by the hearth as if he had grown there from a morose three-year-old into a clean and tidy , almost dandified five .
15 We did not tell him how glad we were that he had stayed away from the moor !
16 He had stayed away from the whisky .
17 The saga , which was illustrated with his own naïve pen-and-ink drawings , had its origins in the compassion he had felt for the sufferings of the animals in the past war ( ‘ If we made [ them ] take the same chances as we did ourselves , why did we not give them similar attention when wounded ? ’ ) and in the letters about an imaginary horse surgery that he had written home from the front to his two children , Elizabeth and Colin ( the latter of whom habitually called himself Dr Dolittle ) .
18 Not just Giles 's spite-filled revenge , but the expression in Nathan Bryce 's eyes as he had gazed down from the dais .
19 She repeated what he had heard already from the lips of Evans .
20 When he made what may be argued were his next intellectually significant appearances , in 1923 at the Peasant International and in 1924 at the Fifth Congress of the Communist International , he had moved on from the French Communist Party and was now accepted in Russia as a revolutionary of considerable promise .
21 What he could n't understand was , if Tammuz was Ewan , as he suspected , why he had kept away from the girl .
22 He had kept away from the house , not wanting to intrude on the Bonnards ' private grief .
23 Over thirteen years , since he had taken over from the retiring senior partner to whom Francis Sutherland originally brought the affairs of Sleet , David Rosen and Delia Sutherland had come to know each other well enough to do without greetings ; they liked it that way .
24 He had got down from the table half-way through tea and was sitting on a chair in the doorway , looking droopy and listless .
25 He had come up from the bottom and made it to the top : no one was to forget that he was at the top and everyone was supposed to forget where he had come from and how he had got where he was .
26 Than the shops gave place to boarding houses and the hill began ; it was a twin of the one he had come down from the car park .
27 Because then Jesus said to him , who was he talking to , let's , let's start off on the verse one after er after he had come down from the mountains , great crowds followed him that 's Jesus is n't it ?
28 ‘ To us , he had come back from the dead , ’ his mother , Camilla Swann , said yesterday .
29 he had come back from the meeting with Patrick , and he had opened a bottle of whisky … automatically his had reached for it , found it between his legs , and he was raising it to his lips when the hurried knocking shook the door again .
30 He had that look he used to get on Saturday mornings after he had come back from the shops .
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