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

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1 The great hero Sigmar first united the men of the middle Old World into the Empire , and to do so he had to drive out the Orcs and Goblins that lived there .
2 He do n't love thee since Garty moaned so he had to pay back the two shilling given for thee .
3 But only yesterday he had pulled off the best purchase yet — not the biggest , but a vital strip of land running along the foreshore .
4 When they were inside and once he had cleaned up the cut , he said , ‘ I 'm getting a doctor . ’
5 Five minutes later he had slithered down the sandy cliffs , a mug of tea slopping in each hand .
6 Now he had sorted out the technique of using the deaf-aid , he found it wonderfully relaxing .
7 So far he has tracked down the chemical 3-methyl-2-hexenoic acid .
8 Well he had to switch on the interior light to be able to fill out the form .
9 It played on his mind for a time and eventually he had to work out a kind of therapy to get her out of his brain .
10 A lift of his hand and then he had picked up the reins and , with a quick dig of his heels , went straight into a canter .
11 He dominated the conversation , holding the Hackett and Townshend women spellbound as he told of how he had broken up a white-slave ring in Dublin , and how he had rescued an innocent young girl from a fate worse than death .
12 I told him how he had put up a man who was interdit de séjour … .
13 Elsham signalbox is situated in a very remote part of the Lincolnshire countryside and thus evokes more strange happenings that baffled John Daubney when he had to take over the box as a relief signalman .
14 Li Yuan shivered , remembering the day when he had found out the truth about his world ; recollecting suddenly the dream he had had — his vision of a vast mountain of bones , filling the plain from horizon to horizon .
15 ( Only now do I realize how strong the desire in her for a daughter must have been to cause her to dress her youngest son as a little girl almost until the day he went to school , his fair hair nearly reaching his waist ; yet he had grown up a man . )
16 He reached the hotel unscathed , although the burns on his jacket showed where he had beaten out the phosphorous splashes with his leather gloves , and as he followed Peter Young there were , as he later described , ‘ different sounds , from the various calibres of arms , artillery exchanges between Kenya and a coast defence battery somewhere down the fjord , anti-aircraft fire from the ships against attacking Messerschmitts , the demolitions , and the crackling roar of flames ’ .
17 His shirt is frayed at the sleeves where he has rolled back the cuffs , his skin shows brown down the open front , there are small dark hairs , a glistening drop of sweat .
18 ‘ I could n't understand why he 'd given up a job he clearly loved to come back here . ’
19 And now , sitting legs stretched , on a chair too low comfortably to accommodate his six feet two inches , eyes fixed on that single taper , unflickering in the incense-heavy stillness , he could hear again the tone , taut with self-disgust , in which Berowne had explained why he had given up the law :
20 l here were about a dozen customers , mostly middle-aged men sitting alone reading Evening Standards who only troubled the barman to the extent that occasionally he had to turn down the corner of a page of his Stephen King paperback .
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