Example sentences of "he have [verb] [adv prt] [prep] " in BNC.

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1 What you see and hear is His gift of the Holy Spirit which He has poured out on us .
2 Every spare moment of John Drake 's time is devoted to the two-acre garden he has carved out in an open and exposed part of the Fens near Cambridge .
3 He has gone on to be invested as a Commander .
4 As it is , he has gone down as a highly skilled bowler who , because he lacked the flamboyance of some of his colleagues , attracted less attention than many of them ; but who consistently , almost stealthily , got on with the job of collecting three or four wickets in innings after innings after innings .
5 Hypnotists working for the police ask an individual , most commonly a witness or a victim , to imagine that he has gone back to the time of the crime .
6 Now his club 's tighthead , he has gone out of this way to improve his scrummaging technique with specialist advice from among others , his boss , Sandy Carmichael , the 50-times capped Scottish and Lions tighthead Iain Milne ( ‘ immensely helpful ’ ) and Jim Telfer ( ‘ he is just the kind of coach I need because I can be a bit lazy and the fact that he just keeps at you all the time was very good for me ’ ) .
7 Establishing these broad relationships is one of the real achievements of McLuhan and those influenced by him , and , at a time when he has gone out of fashion , it is worth stressing the importance of the ‘ specificity of the medium ’ .
8 It ca n't be any coincidence that the women he has gone out with have been typical English roses with titles , and the Duchess tops the lot .
9 He has played out of his skin twice now but he will admit that one-day internationals are a different game to Tests .
10 But if it 's a lousy job and he has to go out to someone like
11 The twentieth-century preference for ‘ the colloquial ’ in poetry may well be a temporary phenomenon ; Donald Davie 's Purity of Diction in English Verse ( 1952 ) , together with his admiration for the late Augustans , represent one attempt to revive an interest in the use of a ‘ civilized ’ diction ; it is interesting that he has to go back to the age before Wordsworth .
12 In the meantime he has to go back to the town on further business , but first his horse needs shoeing , his cart needs repairing and he needs food and shelter .
13 He says he 's feeling better but he has to go back to the hospice .
14 He actually corrected it later on when he has to go back into it but , you know , just , just a wee point there erm you did , did it initially but corrected it later on when you , you came back into it .
15 He has to go back for it .
16 CHRIS PATTEN , the governor of Hong Kong , gives the impression that he has run out of patience .
17 But sophisticated Sal ( Dylan McDemott ) is n't as convinced about Toby who pursues him until he has to give in to her — er — charms .
18 Young stays there until something happens : he might get a picture within half an hour , although he has hung around until 4 am .
19 He has copped out of his responsibilities .
20 Against bands of ‘ experts ’ and administrators , he has stood up for sensible methods of teaching and testing .
21 We are kept reading by the promise of an original sin or trauma that will justify — either in psychological or moral terms — the very existence of the story , but stripped of the successive identities he has built up over the years , Philip 's father is revealed as no more than an insecure , over-imaginative little boy .
22 In the end , he has lost out on the grounds of inferior physique .
23 He has to hang on to them with his hands . ’
24 DROP : A player drops a ball when he has hit out of bounds or lost his original ball .
25 He has turned up in Australia , has n't he ? ’
26 More recently he has turned up in The Fisher King and At Play in the Fields of the Lord , and he has a small role in Coppola 's forthcoming Dracula .
27 Far from being the ‘ safe ’ appointment as most people imagined — an impression enhanced when he resigned from the Free Presbyterian Church of Scotland after refusing to apologise for attending the Catholic funeral mass of a colleague — he has turned out to be a sweeping , radical reformer .
28 In this , of the great poet-critics of the past the one he most nearly resembles is Dryden , whose criticism virtually always comes before us as the preface to a volume of original imaginative writing — including translations which , in this too like Pound , Dryden considers no less ‘ original ’ than poems he has made up for himself .
29 In the theatre , he argues , there is ( a ) an internal dramatist — who makes up the characters and their actions ; ( b ) an internal actor — who represents to the reader for his benefit the actions he has made up as dramatist ; and , finally , ( c ) an internal audience .
30 ‘ I just ca n't watch myself , ’ he said in Santander yesterday where he has joined up with the England team to watch tonight 's match against Spain .
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