Example sentences of "[coord] he have [vb pp] " in BNC.

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1 Either the branch had been rotten or he had missed his aim .
2 Or he had seen and could n't believe it .
3 He was either trying to force Jesus ' hand to make him fight or he had become so disappointed in Jesus that he acted out of bitterness .
4 Now , if he 'd written in a more highfalutin way , or he 'd talked about Liz and myself , or a variety of other things , in a very pontificating way , it may never have got in the newspaper because they would have said , ‘ What is the relevance ?
5 He told me that he 'd got a good home , or he 'd had a good home , and he just I said why do n't you live there ?
6 It was either an accident or he 'd committed suicide .
7 For example , assume that a child is a rehabilitated person within the meaning of the Act : in other words , he has been subject to a supervision requirement and that requirement has been terminated or a year has elapsed since the date of the hearing that imposed the supervision requirement , whichever is the longer , and he has committed no further offences during the rehabilitation period ; or he has appeared before a children 's hearing which has decided not to impose a supervision requirement on him and six months has elapsed during which time he has committed no further offences .
8 Think of your own favourite writer , of all the books she or he has written .
9 Or he has written and I have not received it .
10 Thus if an individual is to be deprived of a benefit which was enjoyed in the past , and which he could legitimately expect to continue , or he has received assurances from the decision-maker that such a benefit will not be withdrawn without giving him some opportunity to argue the contrary , then in either instance an opportunity for the individual to make representations will be accorded .
11 The writer means that she or he has discussed the poem 's meaning , but the sentence literally says that the next stanza discusses the poem 's beginning ( an unintended meaning ) .
12 The Christian life should be one of joy and peace , they feel , so either they have failed God or he has let them down — though they feel guilty for thinking so .
13 I think in the case of members of staff , the university might well want to say certain sorts of behaviour are inappropriate and we do n't countenance them even if the person involved in the end thinks she 's prepared to put up with it , or he 's prepared to put up with it .
14 Or he 's chucked them away . ’
15 So obviously if Mike 's been chosen once or he 's done it he does n't want somebody asking him again .
16 If he 's got a job there , and he 's done it well or he 's done it badly , tell him he 's done it badly , tell them where they 've gone wrong and tell them what they should do to put it right .
17 I says , he 's either hiding summat or he 's done summat .
18 Now Mickey , our Sports Editor is here and we 've mentioned Brian Houghton , of course , or he 's mentioned himself .
19 This respondent echoed the thoughts of the first by concluding that ‘ … it looks as if he 's played around in the paint , trying to create something — or he 's got confused and mixed everything up and something just happened ’ .
20 I mean , either you 've got ta hang around in the morning , or he 's got ta hang around at night .
21 ‘ E's my brother , miss , and 'e 's come to pay yer a visit , ’ I answered nervously .
22 Philip had been slow to move and he had gained little by coronation by such a lowly archbishop as Tarentaise — Trier , Salzburg , Bremen and Magdeburg were all unavailable .
23 He had written twice asking for a meeting , and he had received no reply .
24 There had been some kind of vast domed hall as he passed through the Gates ; he thought there had been colours within the light then , and he had received a dim impression of a far-off vaulted ceiling .
25 He had been Senior British Officer in command of the prisoners in the orphanage and he had received considerable help from the people of Fontanellato ; eventually he had been helped to reach Switzerland , Now , suddenly , a few months before the date we had settled on for our marriage , he began to worry about the idea of one of his officers ( who made no claims to any sort of upper-class lineage ) marrying the daughter of a village schoolmaster .
26 The ground and the weight seemed too much for him and he had retired from contention before the penultimate fence .
27 When he left , after numerous rows with American socialists , though the class struggle was still his main concern , he had developed a new sympathy with cultural and political nationalism , his character had mellowed , and he had matured into a thinker of depth , breadth , and originality , and an orator of force and passion .
28 However , his candidature in 1911 had been aided by three factors : he was a Conservative rather than a Liberal Unionist , but he was the sort of Conservative who would be acceptable to Liberal Unionists as well ; he was a diehard in opinion , but he had remained loyal to Balfour 's policy throughout the recent twists and turns ; and he had staked a claim by his abandonment of his safe London seat to fight North-West Manchester in December 1910 ( at no real risk , for an alternative safe seat was always available to him if and when he lost ) .
29 Kevin Drummond , QC , for McMartin , said the accused had gone to the police with his parents almost immediately and he had pled guilty to greatly reduced charges .
30 She had seen her general practitioner a week after the separation and he had prescribed a tranquillizer .
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