Example sentences of "he have [vb pp] [to-vb] [prep] [noun sg] " in BNC.

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1 Peter Bergg , prospective Liberal Democrat candidate for Darlington : ‘ The disgusting thing is that he has borrowed to pay for tax cuts .
2 He would soon use these newly acquired talents in the play Jimmy Shine , but the only time in which he has attempted to sing on film were in his two biggest turkeys — Who Is Harry Kellerman and Why Is He Saying Those Terrible Things About Me ? and Ishtar .
3 Mr Abe , who was to succeed Mr Takeshita as prime minister before the Recruit scandal intervened , is not a healthy man ; he has had to return to hospital .
4 He has had to go into year 5 because of the different age for secondary school here but he has coped well with it and is allowed to carry on with his own level of work .
5 He has had to struggle with nature ; compete with the most brilliant men and women of his generation ; labour to outstrip his own achievements .
6 No children , odd sex and , as a high churchman , he 'd really have had a better image of himself if he 'd managed to keep to celibacy .
7 He believed the crofters would desert their thatched houses and unprofitable holdings to occupy the comfortable cottages he had begun to build in town .
8 But writing now was not easy for him : he had begun to suffer with arthritis in the year following his retirement , and had had to give up his violin owing to lack of flexibility of his fingers , and as the condition developed , he found writing more and more difficult .
9 He had gone to look for wood .
10 He had decided to go to bed early .
11 He declined to comment on the allegation that he had decided to leave in order to deflect a Justice Department inquiry into his finances .
12 He had decided to opt for medicine rather than the stage , and had felt virtuous , mildly sacrificial , a little self-important while making this choice .
13 First he had had to apply for permission ( not easy to get ) from the Nature Conservancy Council .
14 Soon they were laughing over the melodrama of it ; how quickly he had seemed to arrive at death 's door , and how absurdly soon afterwards he was stuffing his face and bouncing with health .
15 That was how he had come to go on board the Santa Maria del Sud .
16 So , with the exception of the boy Matthew , who was marked with the same ruthless stamp as himself , he grudgingly tolerated the ‘ intruders ’ brought under his roof , and whom he had come to resent beyond reason ; perhaps because he saw in them his own failure as a family man .
17 Coleridge — mercurial , brilliant , and prodigiously well read — opened to Poole the world of thought and learning he had longed to discover since boyhood .
18 He had refused to go to bed on time , insisted on watching The Late Show on television , and claimed that Badger was ‘ not worthy ’ to lick him .
19 As a very young child he had learned to read from picture books that showed children living in houses like these , in nurseries with sloping ceilings and toy yachts and teddy bears on the floor and solid Papas and gentle Mamas and a view through the window of rooftops and spires , and if there was a cloud across the moon it was in the shape of a sailing ship .
20 The lad Steve came into the room , silently like a little cat ; he was wearing a dressing-gown and pyjamas as if he had started to go to bed , but decided against .
21 He had chosen to go to University in Dundee so he could be near them .
22 The Ayrshire Tory MP is well known for his un-compromising attitude on a variety of topics — nows our chance to find out what he 's got to say about child-care provision and your chance to tackle him on the governments record to date .
23 He no he ca n't , he 's got to go to garage at half past nine .
24 he 's got to go to hospital to have his ears done and things like this , you know ?
25 I thought you said he 's got to go in hospital for his
26 Yes , he 's got to become with experience , only come with playing tests .
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