Example sentences of "have [verb] he for a [noun sg] " in BNC.

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1 Just turned forty , Frank is married to his job , his wife has left him for a colleague , and when he encounters the sexually predatory Helen ( Ellen Barkin ) he breaks one of the first rules in the book by falling for a suspect .
2 ‘ I 'd heard him for a bit by then .
3 Bonanza Boy , one of my old favourites , has been a remarkable horse over the years and I am a touch sad in having to desert him for a horse I consider to have a better chance .
4 If only conventions were not so rigid she could easily have had him for a lodger .
5 In his brown canvas boots , faded blue trousers , checked shirt and frayed cap , one might have mistaken him for a man of no consequence instead of a senior member of local government .
6 I said I may have to hurt him for a remark like that .
7 Of relics of ‘ Our Henry 's ’ birth , the chateau of Pau keeps a single , peculiar example : the large turtle-shell supposed to have served him for a cradle , once his grandfather had christened him by rubbing his lips with a clove of garlic and a dab of Jurançon wine .
8 He was reminded of the statements of the stableman who had joined him for a drink at the Bull , situated at the end of Cross Street , and of the café owner where he had stopped for a fried breakfast .
9 They missed out on Shearer , who joined Kenny Dalglish at Ewood Park after Ferguson had tracked him for a year .
10 The first reference is a friendly one : ‘ Lord Goodman had always been very generous with his legal advice to Labour MPs , including me , and Harold Wilson had used him for a number of assignments , including an exploratory visit with Sir Max Aitken to Ian Smith in August 1968 on the possibilities of a settlement .
11 I had invited him for a meal , and he left around midnight . ’
12 I had known him for a number of years .
13 The incident with the muntjac doe had distracted him for a while but gradually the sense of exultation in his deeds of the previous evening returned and blotted everything else from his mind .
14 According to Wainfleet Ruby had asked him for a photograph of the escaped prisoner from the newspaper 's files , passed her hands over it and discovered that Sniffy was in Epping Forest .
15 It had worried him for a moment , he had n't been quite sure what she meant , but then he reckoned she was referring to the troubles .
16 Owen had taken him for a Sudani because his face was black .
17 It was very much a revenge match for White — Spijkers had beaten him for a bronze in the Seoul Olympics , though then White was injured .
18 She had lost him for a while , at the party , but she 'd already been too drunk to worry .
19 The grandmother who had held him for a family photograph ; the mother Eda , the father Meir , the brothers Chaim , Avram , Aizik and Josef ; the sisters Selma and Esther .
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