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

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1 In many ways they do not have the resources we have in the West , but in Leipzig Masur has a pool of well over 200 musicians whom he has trained up very well .
2 He knows he has sounded off again .
3 The Storehouse chairman feels far more at home leading the expansion of the group he has built up so assiduously .
4 He knows when to turn back and he has turned back frequently when things are n't right .
5 He has turned out badly , my young uncle , a delinquent practically .
6 A leading stone conservator describes the decay he has observed over just ten years
7 Often , when the writer is attempting to represent a particular word , he assumes that the word he has written down genuinely approximates to what he wants .
8 ‘ When the proposals failed , I gave up on the profession and have not set foot in the Institute since , but it is characteristic of Bill 's commitment that he has carried on regardless . ’
9 He has got off lightly : we learn with mildly comic surprise of mitigating circumstances : he had been good to a consumptive fellow student , and he had saved two children from a blazing house , getting burnt himself while doing so .
10 He has taken on possibly the most difficult directorship in the world , with unparalleled masterpieces in the huge collections , an enormous , sumptuous but dilapidated and unmodernised palace as his building , and wholly inadequate funding from the State .
11 He has paid out nearly £12 million in 14 months , and said : ‘ We will pay a price for anybody , provided we think that price is right . ’
12 He has wrapped up warmly and wears good walking boots , old and reliable .
13 But he 'd stood up well to that first interview , hindered rather than helped by the presence of his solicitor , who had never seen his client before and had made it painfully apparent that he would prefer never to see him again .
14 His legs had buckled and knocked , a comic effect , and he 'd gone down too soon for his partner to see the ugly roundel that had begun to form on the white tennis shirt .
15 We all used to bite our lips and nod wisely at these theological conundrums , holding our breath until he 'd gone back upstairs before dissolving into laughter .
16 He 'd fallen off there , Conker expertly dipping a shoulder as they 'd landed .
17 He said he 'd flown over urgently to see me and asked me to come to the Cheshire Cheese , that pub in Fleet Street , at ten o'clock that night .
18 By the time he arrived for Troon for the 1973 British Open , he 'd calmed down altogether ; he could n't do enough for me .
19 Now , abruptly , she could see that he imagined he 'd chalked up yet another small victory .
20 He did n't look as if he 'd driven down here with business matters on his mind … last night 's happenings , even in this fraught atmosphere , swirled back into her mind to torment her …
21 And he 'd laughed out loud , talking through her , ignoring her frantic attempts to stop him .
22 ‘ She found he 'd drawn out quite a lot of money on Friday , from two building society accounts they 've got .
23 He remembered one time he 'd walked up here , in May , after she had started seeing him in the afternoons and going for long walks along the canal-side .
24 He 'd found out there was money aboard . ’
25 At dawn he 'd woken up briefly , plagued by the vanishing wisps of a vague and irritating dream .
26 So when I got there this morning he was still in his pyjamas he 'd got on quite well , all he wanted me to do was wash his face .
27 He 'd got off lightly with the men earlier .
28 he was about he 'd got out again
29 He bumped into some people waiting to join the queue for the seats in the reception area ( ha ; he 'd got in just before the rush ! ) , and went out through the doors back to the street and the bright sunlight .
30 He had pointed out as much to the audience .
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