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

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1 Gagarin had had to search into the past for a word which perhaps he had heard from his granny !
2 However , after a year or so he had recovered from all his problems except cribbing and an occasional bout of colic .
3 DOWN'N OUT POOR Mark Hughes slips up as he tries a shot in Moscow — and soon he had fallen from grace completely .
4 But the garden was deserted and already he had disappeared from view .
5 He still favoured Lyons Corner House , although by now he had graduated from the Grill and Cheese to the Seven Stars .
6 But now he has moved from critic to principal player , he may discover the advantages of the business brain so vilified by Raine 's critics .
7 Indeed the aim of the work was to demonstrate how far he had fallen from ancestral glories , in order that his successors might rectify his errors .
8 He had not realised quite how far he had walked from his hut .
9 How far he had come from the silks and blissful hedonic acid and joyspike of the upper habs of Trazior .
10 Surely he has recovered from losing his brother by now . ’
11 Twenty minutes earlier he had alighted from the Gloucester train at Berkeley station .
12 Then he 's tried from the other side and he 's done the same from the other side .
13 While unpacking , he found a chess set ; his father explained some of the moves , and since then he has gone from strength to strength despite the fact that the family has no chess background .
14 The customer 's duty to take care of the goods ceases 21 days after he cancelled the agreement , unless before then he has received from the trader a written signed request to hand them over .
15 Since then he has operated from various locations and in 1979 was appointed barley buyer for the north of England , based at Knapton .
16 Miss Trimm had talked about her son as an infant , how he had blessed the fishermen on Dynmouth Pier , how he had emerged from her womb without pain .
17 It was patently clear to all that Samuel Pipkin could have poisoned the water after he had drunk from it , if indeed he had drunk from it at all .
18 Edward 's brother-in-law became King Harold II , in 1066 , but he died later that same year at the Battle of Hastings , to whence he had travelled from Stamford Bridge in Yorkshire , where he had successfully defended against an invasion of Norwegians .
19 November 1876 , reported that on the previous Thursday evening , he had preached in the little church at Turnham Green , to whence he had walked from Isleworth .
20 I used to watch him out of the back attic window in the late afternoon , when he had risen from his rest .
21 One of the writer 's earliest memories of Nottingham comes from 1962 when he had alighted from a local train from Sheffield at the Midland Station .
22 Sometime before Jacques married he had moved from the rue Dauphine St Andre des Arts , where he had lived from about 1714 , to the rue de Seine , in the parish of St Sulpice , where he had a large five-storey house in which he lived for over 40 years until his death in 1763 .
23 When he woke up , chilled and stiff , he could not at first understand where on earth he was nor where he had come from .
24 When he woke up , chilled and stiff , he could not at first understand where on earth he was nor where he had come from .
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 And he felt the strange eagle in the cage next to his waiting for a reply to her question about where he had come from .
27 Hawkins was standing at the top where he 'd climbed from the ladder and was gazing nonplussed at the strange scarecrow on the floor .
28 But old boss Beck knows Dublin will come back fighting : ‘ The lad has battled hard to get to the big time and he wo n't forget where he 's come from . ’
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