Example sentences of "[adv] he have [verb] a [adj] " in BNC.
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1 | Before long he had invented a new science called Gastrotechnology , which he defined simply as the scientific explanation of accepted principles of cookery . |
2 | If he 'd had his hands on her for one minute , he could have given her something to remember him by ; if only he 'd spat a single obscenity into her ear before running off , it would have been something . |
3 | He had intended to head back to the funicolare station but perhaps he had taken a wrong turning somewhere in his hurry to get away from Maidstone 's apartment . |
4 | Perhaps he had found a new temporary partner by now . |
5 | Perhaps he had had a bad day at the garage and had not sold enough crummy second-hand cars . |
6 | So he has followed a dual approach , honouring the supply to the supermarkets while continuing to supply and expand the local market ; it is only in this way that the operation has been able to survive and continue to provide a quality product while supporting a number of local employees and their families . |
7 | So he 's got a technical problem . |
8 | There had always been men and once he had cared a great deal about that . |
9 | Well i if his mate comes in , like he 's got a good mate , so if his mate comes in he releases his mate early so if he releases him early , he could be er it takes him about thirty five to forty minutes . |
10 | An hour and a half later he has finished a rough plan and elevation . |
11 | More probably he had tapped a fresh source of energy in himself — call it the power of love — which made him feel invincible . |
12 | By now he had become a convinced Zionist . |
13 | Borrowing on the security of high hopes and honest intentions , as Malcolm Elwin observed in his edition of Haydon 's autobiography and journals ( 1950 ) , and an unsuccessful attempt to live by credit , had brought insolvency and imprisonment , and now he had to make a new start . |
14 | But now he 's put a casual bar in as well . |
15 | But now he has made a full recovery to the delight of his proud parents , Fred and Denise . |
16 | Today he has shed a good deal of that ideology — his speech yesterday was social democratic through and through — but he remains devoid of the work experience relevant to his next task which is to convince the country that he , and Labour , are qualified to form the next government . |
17 | well although he told me he 'd er , he 'd , well he 'd had a reasonable catch he 'd er , remember them , bring one up |
18 | Well he 's got a long wait . |
19 | Well he 's got a key |
20 | Well he 's got a new one |
21 | Well he 's got a little . |
22 | Well he 's got a cold , a very bad cold . |
23 | Yeah , you cheeky little monkey , oh what you mean here he 's got a black eye ? |
24 | Eventually he had built a new being from dismembered corpses , and had re-animated it . |
25 | Two years earlier he 'd had a privatised council house in East Ham , a nice little business and his family . |
26 | Earlier he had envisaged a British revival on a scale which would ensure that Britain was treated as an equal by her wartime partners . |
27 | Fortunately he had had a good deal of practice in this . |
28 | But I I thought then he 'd had a slight stroke so to make him |
29 | I found out he 'd fired his caddie John Moorhouse and then he 'd tried a German lad , but he 'd only lasted the practice round ! |
30 | By then he had made a fatal slip-up , the court was told . |