Example sentences of "[that] he have [verb] with " in BNC.

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1 Until now the possibility had n't occurred to Godolphin — he 'd been too preoccupied by the secret that he 'd lived with most of his adult life — but it was an intriguing , and disturbing , thought .
2 She recalled that he 'd spoken with passion about his family …
3 Still he quoted that he 'd dealt with in his past .
4 She was aware that he 'd rocked with the insult , but was too furious and shaken to care .
5 More than one witness recalled that it gained height steadily after being launched on several occasions in 1848 , and Stringfellow himself certainly considered that he had demonstrated with it the possibility of powered flight .
6 Robin Mark Davies told the inquest that he had gone with Mr Venables to the Central Park Hotel in Bromborough and that his friend had started to ‘ freak out ’ .
7 He also indicated that he had disagreed with other members of the government on the running of the education department and said that he had been " gradually marginalized within the government " .
8 And Eliot lets us know that he had to argue with Pound , who wanted in some items that Eliot excluded , and wanted out some items on which Eliot insisted .
9 Hall no doubt attempted to justify his action , by referring to the meeting that he had with Lewis on 4th August , and although Palmerston said that he had checked with Lewis , there must have been some misunderstanding between the Prime Minister and the Chancellor of the Exchequer .
10 Between June 3 and June 6 Teddy Taylor , a United Kingdom Conservative MP , informed the UK Foreign Office that he had met with Col. Moamer al Kadhafi and Foreign Minister Ibrahim Bishara on a recent visit to Libya ; he had brought back a " package of proposals " for restoring relations between the two countries , and a £250,000 cheque for a UK police charity from the Libyan police union .
11 On Dec. 31 Salim announced that he had met with various Somali representatives in Addis Ababa , Djibouti and Nairobi .
12 Hariri denied reports that he had met with Lebanese opposition figures in France .
13 It was pitiful , the broken blade of a dagger that he had bound with strips of rag to give him a handle , and sharpened as best he could on the edge of the stone under the window ; the worn hollow , paler in colour , was there to be seen .
14 The plaintiff 's declaration alleged that he was owner of the Queen 's Theatre , that he had contracted with Johanna Wagner , a famous operatic singer , to perform exclusively in the theatre for a certain time and that the defendant , owner of a rival theatre , wishing himself to obtain Miss Wagner 's services ‘ knowing the premises and maliciously intending to injure the plaintiff … enticed and persuaded [ her ] to refuse to perform . ’
15 In Right Said Fred 's first rush of press , it was said that he had played with ZZ Top but it was never quite specified how .
16 He had thought that he had done with her long ago , had assumed that she had lost the power to hurt him .
17 However , the runner-up may have been an unlucky loser as it was later discovered that he had raced with a injured heel .
18 He rejected the charge that he had acted with bias against the UK .
19 During his subsequent trial , however , Poindexter 's central line of defence was that he had acted with the general authorization of the President .
20 A visit to France , the details of which remain unclear , also led to the accusation that he had associated with the supporters of Mary Queen of Scots [ q.v. ] there : this may account for the apparent loss of royal favour by the mid-1570s .
21 The story of this far from illustrious beginning was one Hugo never tired of telling , for the fact that he had started with nothing but raw talent and stubborn determination was something of which he was justifiably proud but he was less forthcoming about what had happened next .
22 Thus , despite the fact that he had dealt with the relationship of town and countryside at a very abstract level Bukharin did try to grapple with some of the fundamental , enduring and concrete problems arising from the revolutionary transformation of the economy .
23 De Gaulle handled the problem of the committees in much the same way that he had dealt with resistance organizations in 1944 .
24 It was impossible to persuade himself that he had cohabited with this woman — that they had slept together — eaten together — planned their lives together .
25 To press his case , de Gaulle again employed the tactics of withdrawal and threatened resignation that he had used with the British in 1941 and 1942 .
26 He was probably sitting here now , on that grey , patchy settee that he had described with so much care .
27 His story was that he had collapsed with exhaustion and thirst when a passing American schooner had seen his distress signals and taken him aboard .
28 ‘ Over the meal he told us that he had discussed with the authorities what people would be released .
29 He taught her that the sacrament of the eucharist was so big that he did not feel that he had finished with it when he came home after the service at 8 a.m. on Sunday morning .
30 At this point , he started to take off his plastic apron , indicating that he had finished with water for the day , leaving a bemused teacher reflecting on the relationship of density to ‘ strength ’ .
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