Example sentences of "[noun sg] [pers pn] had [verb] a [noun] " in BNC.

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1 ‘ When I made Midnight Express I had to play a man who was in a permanent messed-up state .
2 I had agreed to this in case I had to have a Caesarian .
3 If it were not for the fact that he was one of the favourites you 'd have been delighted but as a Gold Cup winner I had to feel a bit disappointed .
4 For my additional assessment I had to plan a facility for a chosen client group .
5 In the struggle I had lost a scarf I valued but never went back for it .
6 Since John 's abduction I had kept a diary , hoping somehow that I could capture the time John was missing , to keep things from fading so that I could share them with him when he came back .
7 To sit down in a cafe you had to buy a cup of tea .
8 This meant that to go for a crap you had to take a shovel and dig a hole which was hard work when the ground was solid .
9 ( Sometimes this involves a quasi-symbolic element : for example in moments of danger they remember a bear they had seen a cave by the sea ( pp. 79 , 95 , 102 , 179 , 182 ) .
10 As a boy I had read a lot of sea stories and indulged in fancies of rounding the Horn in a windjammer .
11 As a child she had had a piggy bank ; she could recall the physical satisfaction of its jingling weight in her hands .
12 He discovered that as a girl she had had a passion for Stendhal , so had he , and they talked about Julien Sorel and Tolstoi and Rimbaud .
13 In one scene he had to take a handkerchief out of his pocket , and in the process shower Maggie Smith with nuts .
14 No wonder he had seemed a bit on edge .
15 Maurice told me that last winter he had to borrow a candle from Dreadnought to unfreeze the lock of his woodstore .
16 He grew flowers on the graves : last winter he had started a cemetery at the bottom of the garden and stuck in a big cross for a sign .
17 As a child he had played a game with some of his friends where one child would stand behind another and put his hands round the other 's chest .
18 But in her heart she had felt a pang of unease .
19 ‘ Yes , it was good , ’ she replied , rather vexed in case she had betrayed a lack of appreciation by standing up too quickly .
20 It was that same look she had caught a glimpse of earlier .
21 At one point she had joined a group of these elderly relatives , women either widowed , de-childed or , their men at the bar talking men 's talk , temporarily joined in huddle with sisters .
22 Thank goodness she had married a visionary like Stephen .
23 Yes , the tour was definitely looking up a little , and only the previous evening she had written a card to her daughter to say that in spite of a death and a theft and a murder she was ‘ beginning to make one or two very nice friends on the trip ’ .
24 In the process she had made a lightning circumnavigation of the British Isles and was now steaming hard down the west coast while we returned by the eastern route .
25 To the last moment he had feared a trap , but this was the fresh air before him , the dim air of the ravine he knew , hemmed in with rock on both sides between the church and the castle .
26 In fact , Botham did have an excuse , in that before the match he had received a death threat .
27 By the Ptolemaic Period he had become a god of healing and thus was associated with Imhotep in the Theban temples of Deir el-Medina and Deir el-Bahri .
28 For his funeral he had made a list of people he wanted invited ( they did not include any Japanese ) , the lessons he wanted read , the hymns he wanted sung .
29 After some months of working with him it gradually emerged that although he had indeed identified his wife 's body he had had a member of the hospital staff with him at all times .
30 And we went up there and we had just we 'd , we took the labour rooms and er of course we had got a cup of tea with them you know ?
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