Example sentences of "have ever have " in BNC.
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1 | ‘ This is the weakest team New Zealand has ever had , ’ one former All Black , George Tyler , inveighed in the New Zealand Herald . |
2 | He says it was one of the best sexual experiences he has ever had . ’ |
3 | It gave Brian McMaster , the company 's managing director , the worst night he has ever had . |
4 | No pope in history has ever had as much power over the lives of his flock as some of these self-styled leaders in the Western fellowships . |
5 | Anyone who has ever had a close encounter with that lethal spirit tequila ( accurately described here as liquid plutonium ) will experience an agreeable sense of schadenfreude as the characters toss back the shots with reckless abandon , while the evocation of the hideous , hungover morning-after is hilariously achieved . |
6 | I ca n't imagine he has ever had to search for his mother , or had narcolepsy , or become a hustler , yet he does all three so brilliantly in the film it breaks your heart . |
7 | No newspaper in history has ever had such a lead story for its first ever first edition as the Glasgow Advertiser and Glasgow Herald , 207 years ago . |
8 | Bradshaw was getting ready to go out again when he caught sight of what he later called ‘ indisputably the largest wave anybody has ever had to deal with ’ . |
9 | ‘ It was one of the best classes the school has ever had , quite an academic one . |
10 | ‘ She was the closest girlfriend he has ever had and I ca n't imagine anyone getting that near to him again . ’ |
11 | There are some strange things in there , that no group has ever had with a major . |
12 | Mr James Johnston , in whose house the first meeting of Sunday School teachers took place , was in real terms , the most generous benefactor Edenderry Church has ever had . |
13 | Cherry ( who succeeded Coleman as Principal Army Veterinary Surgeon on Coleman 's death , thus blighting the hope of assistant professor Sewell that he might follow Coleman in that post ) that Coleman was ‘ the greatest enemy that the profession has ever had in its highest ranks ’ . |
14 | Certainly anyone who has ever had a severe , immediate reaction to a food is likely to react in the same way if they are told that they have consumed some of the same food . |
15 | If the child has ever had a severe reaction , or suffers from asthma , then the retesting must be done very cautiously . |
16 | I doubt whether the language of a woman 's clothes has ever had such a large vocabulary before , in any society . |
17 | ‘ It 's not the sort of work Super Mario has ever had to do , but I feel a little more patriotic about this than any of my other jobs , ’ he says . |
18 | I reckon 1992 was the best year he has ever had . ’ |
19 | ‘ Now we 're going home for the first proper Christmas Laura has ever had , ’ said Fran . |
20 | Since very small , light animals can fall a long way without being hurt , it 's quite likely that it survived in the forest world under the tree and had the second most interesting experience any tree frog has ever had . |
21 | ‘ No Villanuova has ever had a job , that 's why , ’ he replied as if he were talking to a child . |
22 | Dennis was the best political administrator the British climbing world has ever had ; and we , as climbers , will remain in his debt for decades to come . |
23 | Adds Campbell : ‘ There are some good strikers around , and I do n't know if the England manager has ever had such a choice . ’ |
24 | No child has ever had such an exciting young life as Little Billy , and no child has ever kept such a huge secret so faithfully . |
25 | Probably no manuscript historian has ever had such wide range of confident experience , except perhaps the late Otto Pacht , Professor Alexander 's first teacher and M. Francois Avril in Paris , to whom the present book is dedicated . |
26 | Gaitskell was probably the brightest and most administratively experienced Minister the industry has ever had to deal with . |
27 | And the best advice she has ever had from a conductor ? |
28 | Writing for period instruments ( players from the Orchestra of the Age of Enlightenment ) was a further excuse to stick to the keys that Mozart wrote in , and fully enjoy playing with some of the most wonderful musical ideas anyone has ever had . ’ |
29 | It is not only a conflict between old and new generations of activists , it symbolises a deeper malaise between the only mass party the working class has ever had and its working-class electors , who are also its clients . |
30 | Few people can appreciate Basil 's contribution for none of the present generation started with him in the County , and none of those who have come and gone over the years has ever had the same influence with the teachers for he had a diffidence and a modesty which helped then , a lot . |