Example sentences of "he have get [prep] " in BNC.

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1 Albie has become a celebrity in Speke , and now he has got over the shock I think he is actually enjoying the limelight .
2 After all , the Minister is always returning to the House to tell us what a wonderful deal he has got for the British farmer and consumer .
3 He has got to , he has got to , ’ confirmed the seer .
4 ‘ He has got to , he has got to , ’ confirmed the seer .
5 My dealings with the café owner have left me with the impression that he has got to breaking point with the number of canoeists being attracted to the Fairy Glen and has singled out a canoeist who happens to drive a red Escort van and has used this as an excuse for stopping other canoeists when the real reason goes much deeper and in my opinion is linked to financial gain .
6 He has got through a dozen of them over the years and generations of cricketers have passed by .
7 I can assure him that fair play is what he has got in this case .
8 Andy Warren does n't have a door key , he has to get in another way .
9 After all — had n't one of the things that had made it so difficult to get over Tony been the fact that he 'd got off scot-free ?
10 He 'd got into a rut .
11 And then came the night his whole world had collapsed , the night he 'd got into a drunken brawl in a harbour side bar and punched a major in the mouth .
12 Now once he got in for his half , half pint in , in the in the passage he 'd have , he 'd have a good swig and , and it was about when he 'd got to bottom of the glass put it down .
13 And when I saw the landlady there she said that she did have a Mr there but he 'd left a few days ago , did n't know where he 'd got to .
14 And they said that that erm he 'd got to erm what did he say ?
15 All he 'd got for the mite was a tatty old kite
16 £20 was all he 'd got for one beast .
17 So he placed an order with him for all these , and he had to come back to the factory , reorganize the factory , to meet this terrific order he 'd got for pencils , you see .
18 I know he stabbed the portrait but he 'd got over all that and he never killed her … he did it out of sheer unhappiness and frustration … but that was months ago … you must believe me ! ’
19 He 'd got about half-way through the book , and stuck .
20 For a moment she was confused ; she thought it was the thin man , and she could n't work out how he 'd got behind them .
21 And he 'd got round the corner , ready to go down to the rest of the stairs which went down , and then at the bottom turned round the corner again .
22 Mm I mean he looked at me like I was a bit silly and it was only when I got it and looked he 'd got after Christmas written
23 He was wearing the démodé pinstriped suit he 'd got from a junk-shop for a production of Arturo Ui ( ‘ grossly overplayed' — Glasgow Herald ) and the tie he 'd worn as Harry in Marching Song ( ‘ adequate if uninspiring' — Oxford Mail .
24 Some let-out he 'd got in the contract .
25 He stopped and had a cup of tea himself and explained to the Covent Garden porters , who wanted to know what he 'd got in the back , that it was the Sleeping Beauty .
26 He also had another er , what we call a journey waybill and that , he used to record on there at each termini he used to record the time and the ticket numbers that he 'd got in his rack at that particular time , so it could be seen between certain times that a ticket perhaps was sold between Witton and Rushmere Heath .
27 He even handed over his B&B passbook once and asked how much he 'd got in it .
28 He won that actually on appeal because he said he needed to raise the funds for a project he 'd got in mind and they allowed him twenty eight days in the first year , he now carries on fourteen days without planning permission every year , but give him credit he does run it very well , er and you can not fault him , but we in our area do actually issue licences , you can not have a car boot sale or market stall without a licence and I personally have run the charity markets in er the village high street and got a licence at the cost of a pound .
29 ‘ He told me he 'd got in touch again the moment he 'd heard that you 'd decided to soft pedal a bit on work and so could be open to having a boyfriend . ’
30 He subsequently er went to work at the Berlick in latter years and , and this man was just sweeping-up at the Berlick and I could n't believe it cos he was so high up in the technology in the war and he 'd be a dental mechanic and he 'd come down to just being a sweeper-up , and he used to show me the pay packets he 'd got in the war and you know it was fantastic money even , even by today 's standards this is going back fifteen years
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