Example sentences of "[noun pl] he have [verb] [prep] the " in BNC.

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1 Before an audience of 5,000 at the Royal Albert Hall , Harrison performed songs he had written over the past 25 years , and some Beatles classics .
2 He would be ever hereafter his own successor in developing sequels to the steps he had taken in the spring and summer of 1837 .
3 For two centuries he has stood between the Elves of Ulthuan and their many foes .
4 He went to Sacramento with no readymade staff ; he had no understanding of how the political system worked and had no strategy for translating the goals he had espoused during the campaign into a programme of practical proposals .
5 He 'd never told Mum about the words he 'd had with the relief officers , which was a blessing really because she would never have shut up about it .
6 He himself was only a little shy — and obviously very proud of the English words he 'd acquired in the few months since his arrival .
7 Flipping back through the pile of loose pages again , he looked for the words he had written about the dark-haired princess who had so generously , so openly acknowledged his presence , the girl to whom ( surely ) he would have been able to tell The Truth .
8 The Frenchman 's dark aquiline features and unsmiling silences made him think of history-book pictures he 'd seen of the warrior heroes of ancient Greece and Rome , and the dismay he had felt at first when their car had struck the Annamese villager had increased his sense of awe .
9 They were slanted somehow , and he recollected pictures he had seen of the early ancestors of the Manchu .
10 Above all , the flight of Rudolf Hess to Scotland gave rise to every conceivable kind of speculation — so much so that one report in Bavaria dubbed May 1941 ‘ the month of rumours ’ , as tales surfaced everywhere about the disloyalty , corruption , theft on a grand scale , and flight abroad of Reich notables such as Himmler and Ley and various Bavarian Party bosses , among them Gauleiter Adolf Wagner , said to have been caught trying to get across the Swiss border with 22 million Reichmarks he had stolen from the confiscated property of dissolved monasteries .
11 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
12 It drew upon a series of speeches he had made in the late autumn , particularly an address to an all-union student forum .
13 He has informed his doctors and begun the painful process to negate the effects of the hormones he has taken for the last nine months .
14 For months he had lived with the fear of this exile to England , among boys a year younger than himself , separated from his home and his family for a reason he rejected .
15 He was hoping to hit bottles he had placed on the roof of the garage opposite .
16 A character wearing the Talisman of Ulric automatically recovers wounds he has suffered at the start of his turn .
17 Another great Therapy ? story revolves around a character called Eddie Faith , who found religion at a Christian meeting one night , and the next day walked into the local police station and confessed to 24 robberies he 'd committed in the previous year .
18 Discouraged and exhausted by all the struggles of orthodox opera production Brook abandoned the opera house circuit a long time ago but first with Carmen and now Pelleas he has reached into the heart of operas , purifying them without diminishing them .
19 Discouraged and exhausted by all the struggles of orthodox opera production , Brook abandoned the opera house circuit a long time ago but first with Carmen and now Pelleas he has reached into the heart of operas , purifying without diminishing them .
20 Last month he was hauled before the management committee of the British Judo Association to explain a series of criticisms he had made in The Independent after the poor British results at the European Championships in Helsinki last May .
21 He 'd been funny , telling stories against himself of fiascos he had survived in the theatre , and he 'd been flattering in a subtle way .
22 Since this was Keith Jones ' last committee meeting , the committee expressed its gratitude for the valuable contributions he had made to the committee .
23 He said afterwards that he thought the explanations he had given regarding the crisis had satisfied the King .
24 Within a few weeks he had resigned from the party and become the founder of a new movement , the British National Socialist League .
25 Few of the cast would have seen him in the revues of the late thirties where his career started , but they would all have caught up with the films he had made in the immediate post-war years .
26 He could n't reconcile those terrible uncontrolled cries he had heard in the night with anything he already knew of his mother .
27 A refutation of the aspersions he had cast on the personal conduct of the separatists , it concluded with an appeal to her antagonist to ‘ receive admonition , though it be from a woman ’ .
28 For nearly fifty years he 'd worked with the New York Philharmonic , the orchestra 's manager , Nick Webster , was one of the first to pay tribute to his talent at America 's best known classical musician .
29 Within three years he had emigrated to the United States .
30 He was not sure how she would take it , leaving the house before they had intended and moving up north ; also , in the last few years he had got into the habit of sparing her any unnecessary decisions or arguments .
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