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

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1 He has been so occupied since before his first book was published ; in season and out of season , through thick and thin , and always with the certitude that his views , his perceptions , would prevail : a catalyst and an agitator of the first order .
2 The first because he has been wrongly taught and the second because he has been wrongly treated .
3 In the process he has been much reviled and much praised .
4 He 'd been badly beaten and his throat had been cut .
5 He had been badly damaged when the Zionists had sent their commando squad with explosives to La Seine-sur-Mer , close to the French port of Toulon , to destroy the two reactors that were to have been shipped to Tuwaithah 48 hours later .
6 When St Paul told the Christians in Philippi that he had learnt to be content , he did n't mean that he was smug ; it did n't mean that he had been well fed and could put his feet up .
7 He added that he had been well treated when he returned for the US Open .
8 Earlier he had been officially advised that it was his legal right to have his solicitor present ; but surprisingly Downes had taken no advantage of the offer .
9 In Amman on Nov. 30 he again alleged that while many Security Council members had shown a " tangible degree of understanding " , he had been privately assured that " the real issue [ of lifting the blockade ] hinged on the positions of the United States , Britain and France " .
10 He looked distraught , his tie was pulled down and his collar open , his hair was ruffled , but even if he had been neatly dressed and groomed , the bright staring eyes and hectic cheeks would have warned Pascoe that something was amiss .
11 There was much wrath that he had been meaninglessly sacrificed and a Test career that had given so much pleasure needlessly brought to a premature end .
12 Patrick Jenkin , as Conservative Social Services Secretary , more recently described how he had been reliably informed that ‘ the increasing turbulence of modern life , with rising crime , industrial disruption , violence and terrorism , was rooted in the separation of children from their parents during the war ’ .
13 He had been too rushed and busy in Rome to enjoy his stay there , although it seems that the American writer , Frederic Prokosch , persuaded him to go on a pilgrimage one afternoon to find the legendary " Golden Bough " on the shores of Lake Nemi ; what they found was an old and dilapidated oak .
14 Walesa 's move caused alarm among those who feared that he was aiming to rule without parliament as a virtual dictator , on the basis that he had been democratically elected and that 65 per cent of Sejm members , under the 1989 compromise provisions establishing the parliament [ see pp. 36578 ; 36722-24 ] , had not .
15 The employer refused to do this so Mr Bowles resigned and claimed that he had been constructively dismissed and that his dismissal was unfair .
16 Wilson found it hard to believe Mr Landor had ever written poetry , that he had ever been judged a great poet , but Miss Blagden , who had moved into the Casa Guidi for the winter , swore that he had been much admired and gave her a whole list of his published works .
17 The plaintiff could not prove that the defendant knew it was a secret process either because of its nature or because he had been specifically told that it was and Vaisey J pointed out that if it were really secret it was surprising that the defendant 's employment had brought him into contact with it ; he had been to prison in the past .
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