Example sentences of "[adv] [conj] he have [verb] [det] " in BNC.

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1 A quick spin of his ‘ Sweet Freedom — The Best Of ’ compilation album of a few years back is proof enough that he has had many hits in his home patch without making similar in-roads here .
2 So if he 's got that place in a good state , it 's beholden on us
3 And yet , as carelessly as he had discarded this coat , he had deliberately destroyed her hopes and her dreams .
4 At least out here they had to play according to some sort of standard of fairness , even if it was a standard they could change as they went along according to how it suited them ( like doubling the bus fares just after he 'd found that job way out in Brentford ) , but in prison , even more so than in a mental hospital , there were no real limits to what they could do to him .
5 ‘ You ca n't pester the poor man about money just after he 's had such a dreadful shock ! ’
6 Soon after he had learned another police car giving chase had lost the men 's Ford Sierra nearby .
7 The strike had ended soon after he had commenced this venture so he was again at work during the day , as a machinist , but after getting home at 6 p.m. and hastily eating a meal , he went into his ( or should I say , the communal ) bedroom , and worked long into the night .
8 Gregory seems to have confused the chronology of events in the 520s and 530s , just as he had muddied that of the two previous decades .
9 ‘ Then he may join me indoors when he 's had enough , as I already have . ’
10 He had every intention of getting the hell out of Paris just as soon as he had collected all the money owed to him .
11 As soon as he had apprehended any kidnappers , the state prosecutor moved in on the hostages and he never saw them again .
12 Jonathon knew he had less than two miles to go and that his faithful horse would trudge him home as he had done many times before .
13 It was unlikely that he would have been refused , now that he had acquired such patrons and had shown the service that he might offer his adopted country .
14 And even now that he has achieved all this he does n't stand still .
15 ‘ Well , let's hope he is , now that he 's got that letter back , ’ said Joe .
16 He had himself frequently led patrols along the narrow roads and boreens that ran like veins through the countryside about Cork , and before that he had spent more time than he cared to remember in the muddy trenches and dug-outs of France with shells screaming overhead .
17 Right , well so he 's done that has he ?
18 Not that the gay Oz had been his idea , or even that he had provided much input , apart from advice on the telephone .
19 No er well well if he 's got any sense I I always tell the advertiser I said now the adv I said you as the advertiser have got to keep worrying you may have to chivvy them up .
20 Now you might say perhaps , without really thinking about it , well if he 's got any sense he wo n't have a lot of fe , faith in me because I am , I am a great failure , I 've let him down .
21 Even if he 'd shown any signs at all of wanting to have her around — which he had n't — she 'd be nothing more than a burden .
22 However , even if he had added these , the list was bound to be short .
23 Woosnam names Bernhard Langer as his ‘ dark horse ’ and the German has succeeded in keeping an appropriately low profile even if he has had more practice rounds than anyone .
24 Turned out the last time the staff had seen him he was a student here and he 'd made such an arsehole of himself they 'd sworn they 'd never let him back in !
25 Yeah , erm , I was going to is that erm it was always the same , two jobs down so it was due to go his boss would have then I 've been there as well cos he 's caused such a stink
26 He remembered the feel of her tears on his own face , and covered his eyes in the Caffè Gambrinus ; in shame for all those years ago when he had provoked such outrage in her , but in sweetness too , for jealousy was a sign of love , every woman knew that .
27 Tolonen had not been wrong all those years ago when he had recognised this in Karr .
28 IT is true that John Fullard of Hartlepool only appears here when he has had some little difficulty with the Post Office .
29 At half-term , Ali had offered ten pounds to any of ‘ the proud Muslim people of South-West London ’ who would be prepared to finish off Robert Wilson , but , even though he had raised this sum to twelve pounds fifty , there were , so far at any rate , no takers .
30 He was smilingly recognized at the reception desk , but his credentials were still carefully scrutinized and he was required to await the escorting messenger , even though he had attended enough meetings in the building to be reasonably familiar with these particular corridors of power .
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