Example sentences of "[adv] he has [verb] his [noun] " in BNC.

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1 Perhaps he has changed his mind .
2 AN ELDERLY man claimed yesterday he has to risk his life to cross a busy Darlington road because of illegally parked cars .
3 Namely he has expressed his wish to King Leopold of the Belgians and requested him to press us for a withdrawal .
4 ( m ) It is suggested that the accused who can be traced ( e.g. he has put his name and address on the back of a cheque ) can still be guilty of making off .
5 The 15 homes in the first phase are all sold and occupied and now he has turned his attention to phase two , which will comprise 14 homes .
6 Now he has won his spurs , he can afford to recognise mistakes like that without fearing loss of face .
7 ‘ Richardson had a chance of qualifying in the world championships but he failed and now he has won his place the officials think that their choice was justified , but it was not . ’
8 But now he has to pin his faith on the emerging talent and pray they continue to make progress .
9 Any other author and I might overlook the fact but now he has augmented his idleness with bad taste .
10 Now he has to tell his patients .
11 A manager is accountable to his superiors in the organisation for his actions and he is obliged to report to his superior how well he has exercised his responsibility and the use of the authority delegated to him .
12 The sequence of modern physiotherapy treatment normally follows a pattern : the patient has to recover his ability to balance first and foremost ; then he has to recover his ability to transfer his weight from side to side ; standing balance is the next stage , accompanied by the ability to sit down from standing up , and to stand up from sitting ; selective movements using the affected arm and leg come next ; then he learns to make steps , followed by walking ; function in the upper limb ( arm ) and controlling it in order to make selective movements against gravity happens at a late stage ; the final rehabilitation task is to regain functional , detailed movements in the affected hand and foot .
13 He 's done all the work at the scene — all anyone can do — and then he has to cool his heels with the rest of us , waiting for God 's gift to forensic pathology to come screaming up with a police escort and break the news to us that what we all thought was a corpse is — surprise , surprise indeed a corpse , and that we can safely move the body . "
14 Since then he has dedicated his life to his practice in Calcutta where he now only sees the most difficult cases , particularly those with organic pathology for which he finds the 50 millesimal potencies especially appropriate .
15 Since then he has spent his time equally divided between Belfast and a home he has in the south of France .
16 Instead he has fought his condition with the gritty determination of the prize fighter he is .
17 Laura 's Beau ran third in the race last year but again he has had his problems , the main one being a low blood count .
18 Mr Barre 's brutality has made him plenty of enemies , and recently he has lost his knack for balancing the clans .
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