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

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1 A woman police constable who reported him has since had to be transferred ‘ after being cold-shouldered ’ .
2 you know what I mean , but the fact that I have been helping him has already conflicted and he has n't been in school a week , you know , and then eventually when they get those books out and he 'll say oh I know that one , that says Luke
3 What raises Eliot above the entrapping circles of city and savage is what for him has continually to raise words towards the Word , something made available in partial revelations .
4 That prospective Tory candidate for Cheltenham John Taylor survived attempts to deselect him has much do with her efforts as local party chairman .
5 His hatred for those who crossed him having once shared the bonds of mutual loyalty was unbounded , but equally he never forgot old services performed , and , apart from the ‘ Night of the Long Knives ’ in June 1934 , he did not resort to purges within the Party .
6 It would have been very hard for him to have suddenly dropped her after all she had endured .
7 However irrational , she knew that her love for him had somehow betrayed Philippe .
8 You were quite right about Ken Noakes — my experience with him had temporarily made me lose faith in men , and in myself .
9 In front of them , about twenty yards away , he had seen a barbed-wire fence some three feet high which an old corporal told him had already cost a thousand lives of those who had done nothing more than erect it .
10 As fate had a habit of doing , it had played what he termed a rather dirty trick for although Martin and his father before him had both found the running of the estate anything but easy as far as money was concerned , this young man would be better off than either of them , for Martin had only within the last year taken out two very large policies on his life , the second when he knew he was going to be married .
11 When the door had opened to admit her , the waiting tension still gnawing at him had finally transformed itself into swift action , and he 'd been too busy quitting the bed and judging the right moment to attack to identify the intruder .
12 He smiled at her , but the concern she 'd once felt for him had wholly dissipated .
13 His pleasure that Curzon had agreed to serve under him had quickly evaporated .
14 But his insistence that she leave everything to him had only served to strengthen her determination to be independent .
15 The assistant putting that bib on him had foolishly come too close .
16 No king before him had ever assumed so complete a spiritual leadership of the English church .
17 Well everybody that was working for him had always worked in the quarries all their life , and they er they just been working for the slater company before the quarry shut down .
18 Besides , apart of him had always enjoyed hospitals .
19 And see s.24(3) : [ n ] o goods shall be regarded as having continued to be stolen after they have been returned to the person from whom they were stolen or to other lawful possession or custody or after that person and any other person claiming through him have otherwise ceased as regards these goods to have any right to restitution in respect of the theft .
20 Clever western diplomacy could try to make him appear less heroic , by keeping the linkage vague , but then — unless he has belatedly realised the hopelessness of his position — he would see no benefit in it .
21 The fact that a person was aware of an exclusionary term or notice does not in itself mean that he has voluntarily accepted the risk ( s. 2(3) ) .
22 In particular circumstances a director may owe a duty directly to shareholders ; that duty will not derive from his status as a director but from particular responsibilities he has voluntarily taken on .
23 The author states , quite correctly in the reviewer 's opinion , that the Southern Railway 's passenger ancillary vehicles had a character all of their own and he has meticulously chronicled their fleet .
24 He has lately recovered his childhood faith , ’ Everard explained , ‘ as I also did some years ago . ’
25 Morrissey , formerly lead singer of the Smiths and now a solo artist , is the central figure in this demi-monde and he has successfully mounted a long career based on a delightfully British blend of prurience and prudery .
26 His dealings with the chief sources of Opera North 's subsidy , the Arts Council and Leeds City Council , are happy enough , and he has successfully scotched a dismal plan to merge with Scottish Opera , but he worries that Leeds lacks a ‘ coherent cultural policy ’ of the sort that Birmingham and Glasgow have committed themselves to .
27 The reading of my Botanick Essays and the Experiments he has successfully made in pursuance of what I have advanced there has created in him an earnestness to correspond with me .
28 He has successfully persuaded the crowd that justice has been done .
29 And while he has successfully offended the doctrinaire Protestants , he does not seem to have pleased the Pope .
30 He has successfully rescued a whole series of major houses , without a penny of historic buildings grants , by adapting them as self-contained houses and cottages .
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