Example sentences of "have have [art] [noun] [prep] his " in BNC.

  Next page
No Sentence
1 An adventurer who has had a chunk of his person ripped off by a Skeleton takes 3 Wounds from the blow , in addition to normal damage .
2 Time after time he has had a tournament in his pocket only for a miracle shot from a rival to steal it away .
3 ‘ I think he will win , but it has only been when he has had the sun on his back in the last couple of days that he has really come on . ’
4 Sam , about 16 months old , has had the time of his life with Peter .
5 Although once he 'd had a wife of his own .
6 Of course he 'd had a lot on his mind .
7 I mean when he was born they laid him on me , he 'd had the cord round his neck three times and he looked like a tortoise with his long neck and this little tiny head [ laughs ] .
8 He was also unusual among philologists in having had a price on his head .
9 Little Nell , perceived in a commonplace context , would have had no purchase on his imagination .
10 They might as well have had a rope round his ankle .
11 The sort of person Moran was would have been an IRA person and belonged to the IRA at the foundation of the country and would have had a tricolour on his coffin .
12 In the old days , if someone had called a journeyman craftsman a ‘ worker ’ , he would have had a fight on his hands …
13 He was in effect doing nothing … so even retaining the formation we should have had a midfielder in his postion .
14 I expect when he was a little boy he 'd rather have had a Bible for his birthday than anything else in the world , even a bicycle .
15 Married or unmarried , he would not have had the courage of his proclivities : he needed the pretence there had been because pretence was everything to him .
16 Jean-Claude insisted to me more than once that to trans-pose Le Grand Meaulnes it was essential to have had a childhood like his own .
17 Perhaps the Minister had had a row with his wife and to wound him she used my name .
18 Ron Barton , who had had a word with his editor at his regular table at the Savoy Grill , had been told he could pay five thousand for an exclusive if he thought her to be worthwhile .
19 Shamefully , she had had a vision of his body naked , even before they had gone to bed together , her first intimation that she was beginning to feel more for him than she ought , for the vision had not frightened but intrigued her .
20 It was clear that the debtor had had no communication with his accountant .
21 In the midst of all these , School had had the benefit of his being a Governor for 46 years ( he was first nominated by the Borough Council in 1923 ) and Chairman for eleven .
22 He had had the fright of his life seeing that woman in the hotel .
23 He had had the playwright in his power , and been tempted to astonish the court and the television audiences by sucking him dry on the stand .
24 He had reached for the Ruger as soon as he had seen the taxi pull up , and he had had the Ruger in his grip when the front door opposite had opened , and he had loosened the grip when he had seen that the target carried no cases , only had his daughters ’ hands in his .
25 Perhaps West who had been very conscious of social needs , had had an influence on his thoughts on such matters .
26 Last December an appeal court ordered the retrial of a convicted murderer when it was revealed that his wife had had an affair with his lawyer .
27 ‘ Do n't worry — I 've had a word in his ear . ’
28 I had to have an explanation for his team 's strange behaviour .
29 Erm I asked and she said that his dad sent him off to get it X-rayed and she goes , But he 's had a history with his toe poor blighter .
30 When he 's had a bath at his flat he 's coming here . ’
  Next page