Example sentences of "[noun sg] he have [vb pp] [art] [noun] " in BNC.

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1 ‘ And then in the living room we 've got an umbrella stand with two stout walking sticks and a Samurai ceremonial sword , and on the Welsh dresser in the kitchen there 's a lemon squeezer full of ammonia , and on top of the wardrobe in the bedroom he 's got an air pistol that fires steel ball-bearings …
2 Yeah , Mike , Mike and , he 's erm I do n't think he 's , I think he will be able to in future he 's got a meeting arranged tonight and he 'll be here next time .
3 In the sand you see the iron although it broke it more but this plough he 'd kept the thing fairly together .
4 Since his second stroke he had found the effort of conversation hardly worth the meagre rewards .
5 Then before she realised his intention he had slipped the doge 's ring on to her third finger .
6 And erm he goes , say I , say , we 've got a runner today , Peony , but erm the lad 's got ta go he 's got ta go into the weighing room , wa well he 's , get his form , fill it in the weight he 's got the jockey who rides him , that 's got ta be erm , forty five minutes before the race .
7 In his innocence he had allowed the salesman in to discuss doors .
8 The gleaming black exterior with the polished silver lamp-brackets and the forbidding curtains within that could be drawn to hide its occupants from prying stares told him it was a mourners ' carriage he had spent the night in .
9 ‘ By signalling the end for the trade union block vote he has brought an air of realism which was so markedly absent under Neil Kinnock . ’
10 by skill and carefulness he had increased the family wealth and fortune and now he was a mighty man of wealth !
11 There it is , God in his mercy and his love , in his graciousness he has provided a gift , a free package gift for you and for me forgiveness , salvation but there is our responsibility of receiving it or taking hold of it , of experiencing it .
12 In his fourteen years as a fancier he has converted a hobby into something of a triumphant campaign .
13 Alan Cooksey , deputy chief inspecting officer of railways , told a fatal accident inquiry in Glasgow that when he was first presented with a ‘ thumbnail sketch ’ of the proposed lay-out he had seen no reason to delay it .
14 No wonder he had seemed a bit on edge .
15 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 .
16 In Parliament he had been associated with a party which was out of favour with the King , and as Public Orator he had lauded the policy of peace when Charles , then Prince of Wales , was determined to make war on Spain .
17 ‘ Ever since he was a boy he has had a fear of them .
18 But I know I could remember being taken round his school and in the main hall he 'd got a glass fronted cupboard , and he 'd got all sorts of well really and truly they were just pretty pebbles .
19 On the crosspiece he had painted the words : Oliver Bean .
20 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 .
21 At home he has chewed the door frame and part of the back door , as well as the kitchen cupboards , although these were done when he was a lot younger .
22 It was held that he could not , since by accepting the seller 's offer on the telephone he had accepted the goods and thereby affirmed the contract .
23 There is no question he 's got the jump — his wit , the speed of his language , the grab of it , the intimidation of his skillfully-wrought career .
24 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 .
25 For the moment he has lost the battle inside the government , as he clearly recognises in our interview .
26 During the Restoration he had regained the lands he had lost when the king was defeated , and ended up as a Vice-Admiral of the Fleet .
27 In fact , Botham did have an excuse , in that before the match he had received a death threat .
28 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 .
29 ‘ Throughout his eight and a half years as Labour leader he has shown the sort of courage in reforming the party which few politicians are capable of — and which , it must be said , John Major has never been called on to demonstrate in his effortless , virtually unchallenged glide through the great offices of state . ’
30 The goods to he sold had been piled up on the stairs where once " the possessions " had been piled ; bottles of jam and honey , heaps of hermetically sealed provisions , bottles of wine , cakes of chocolate pliable with the heat , tins of biscuits and even a few mouldy hams had been stacked against the splintered stumps which were all that now remained of the banisters Fleury had found so elegant the first evening he had entered the Residency .
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