Example sentences of "he have [verb] it [prep] the " in BNC.

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1 He has raced it at the Nurnburg Ring incorporating a five day trip and intends to explore the delights of this new venture to the utmost .
2 He has raised it with the contractor .
3 ‘ Story of my life , ’ he growls when a red declines to go into a pocket for the simple reason that he has hit it at the wrong angle .
4 The misspelling may be because the child has not previously seen the word written down , but more likely because he has seen it in the context of his reading , without paying much attention to anything more than its contour — that is , he has recognised the word without having to decode it , and has understood it without giving its spelling structure close attention .
5 The reason for this is that ( in many cases ) the client becomes aware of the proposed legislation either because he has been served under the General Orders with a notice as being directly affected , or because he has seen it in the local newspaper or Gazette advertisement .
6 He has proved it beyond the shadow of a doubt .
7 ‘ In charge of ’ means that once a person takes a vehicle on a road or public place he normally remains in charge of that vehicle until he has taken it off the road or public place again .
8 But he has thrown it to the wind which will swirl round Windsor Park tonight by naming no fewer than THREE centre forwards in his side to face Latvia .
9 He said he 'd heard it on the radio this mornin' .
10 His daughter Diane Perry said she was rung by her husband from work after he 'd heard it on the radio .
11 Juliet wondered if he 'd re-stocked it for the occasion .
12 The wedding-dress was in the faded green trunk , just as he 'd imagined it in the night .
13 Well apparently it had gone to Andrew , and , Andrew had cos Andrew is n't in the office all the time , and he 'd left it in the office , and I think they faxed it by th Andrew was gon na talk to somebody about it , but of course , by the time he 'd got there , it 'd already been done and this had happened so I 'm gon na ring erm Job Centre when I get home .
14 He 'd bought it in the Bazaar from an Indian trader who told him it would make the muscle grow .
15 The director said ‘ Action ’ , the sound recordist said ‘ Running ’ , the assistant cameraman said ‘ One forty-five take one ’ , and I put the first question — how did he think the war would have gone if he 'd started it with the 300 U-boats he 'd asked for in 1938 ?
16 ‘ Could he have dropped it in the car ?
17 He was not much older than Peter and he looked puzzled , as if wondering not only how to end this conversation but how he had begun it in the first place .
18 He had written it under the supervision of James Blackadder , which had been a discouraging experience .
19 He told his teacher he had lost it on the way to school , and Mr Watson promptly rapped his knuckles with a ruler for his carelessness .
20 He had seen it from the outside .
21 His arms around her , he began so gently that although McAllister was already feeling stifled , and the fear of men which had beset her for so long had begun to tighten its grip on her , she not only allowed him to kiss and fondle her face and neck , but let him undo her hair , so that it tumbled about her shoulders , as magnificent in its abandon as he had imagined it in the long nights when he had been unable to sleep .
22 He had pledged it to the fans , but once again could n't deliver .
23 His reasons were all based on his search for Rectitudo in mind and will , as he had sought it for the past thirty years .
24 For almost the whole of their walk their objective had been in sight : the green copper cupola of the soaring campanile of Arthur Blomfield 's extraordinary Romanesque basilica , built in 1870 on the bank of this sluggish urban waterway with as much confidence as if he had erected it on the Venetian Grand Canal .
25 He had received it in the post almost a week ago , and the moment he read it his heart had frozen — he had actually felt himself go ice-cold .
26 Not for the first time she wondered how on earth her father had persuaded the children to call him ‘ Gamps ’ and decided that he had done it for the sole purpose of driving her mad .
27 Maurin interjected that he had done it for the best , that he suspected she would spread silly gossip and it was sensible to keep her away from the English journalist .
28 But it was as if he had done it for the thrill of it . ’
29 But it was as if he had done it for the thrill of it . ’
30 He had done it in the street in front of everyone .
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