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

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1 His final point about trust is fair enough , it sounds like he has had a gutful of Leeds fans berating him for sticking to his guns .
2 Rusty Conway becomes one of Serena 's patients because he has had a spell of extreme absent-mindedness which made him incapable of carrying out his work .
3 He is over 55 , married , without education or job training ; furthermore , he has had a spell of registered unemployment , did not work full-time in the 12 months prior to becoming unemployed and lives in a council house .
4 Like you say , I do n't think he can be too good at , if he tried , he has had a lot of injuries apparently .
5 Almost anybody who is offered an honour of some kind indicates that he has had a period of anxious , nay tortured reflection , but somehow inexorably arrives at the conclusion that duty demands — duty to his family , his wife , his children , his bank manager — that he should accept the honour .
6 ‘ Ever since he was a boy he has had a fear of them .
7 If the hon. Gentleman thinks that that is odd it merely shows that , in common with the hon. Member for Livingston , he has had no experience of such matters .
8 He has had the benefit of a fine son and beautiful daughters , but there have been no more great plays . ’
9 He has had the option of accepting council housing
10 Although once he 'd had a wife of his own .
11 Apparently there 'd been this girl , Spanish or Portuguese I think , and Ollie had been giving her private lessons at his flat , and he thought she fancied him , and he 'd had a couple of Special Brews at the time and thought she was just shy , and then he tried kissing her , and it 's the old , old , sordid story , is n't it ?
12 He 'd had a couple of sessions with his union rep and had been told not to worry , it was just a way of filling some quota ; if anything , his job was probably more secure now than it had been before .
13 He 'd had a bit of a raw deal .
14 When I spoke to Travis the other day I understood he 'd had a change of heart . ’
15 Scotty was weary , the gigs were far apart , he 'd had a touch of the ‘ flu and , at over 60 , really did n't feel up to it .
16 Thus , when Dennis offered him exactly half what he had been making , Lauda thought he 'd had a touch of sun .
17 Ed told me he 'd had a lot of bitter arguments about this plan with Hauser . ’
18 Oh , he 'd had a lot of silly nonsense to put up with , but that was only on the surface , he knew that really , and now that the children were off their hands they could be together more and she 'd be less hasty .
19 Turner was suspicious of the other man , as he quite rightly should have been ; but he 'd had a whiff of something he especially did n't like , which considering who and what Ray Doyle was , was an amazing mistake to make .
20 And then he 'd had the thrill of actually seeing ( ‘ a life-time 's ambition ’ ) the Flying Scotsman !
21 Mr Justice garland said he 'd had the advantage of seeing the material gathered during this further enquiry into the pub bombings .
22 His interest had lasted while he 'd had the challenge of disproving her suspicions about his business activities .
23 For the strictly limited purpose of deciding whether Ward J. 's decision should be affirmed or reversed , it suffices to say that an appellate court should always be slow to reject a trial judge 's findings of fact , he having had the advantage of seeing and hearing the witnesses , and that it should be even slower to do so if any findings which it would be minded to substitute would lead to the same result .
24 He had had no expectation of doing more than exasperate , and supply a distraction .
25 He had had no way of knowing whether this was the truth , but the pattern of spurious intimacy had been established .
26 His case was that he had been using the public lavatory for proper purposes when the the police burst into his cubicle and arrested him , and that he had had no contact of any kind with the co-defendant .
27 Poor Ryan , he had had a heart of gold .
28 After some months of working with him it gradually emerged that although he had indeed identified his wife 's body he had had a member of the hospital staff with him at all times .
29 He discovered that Bob was twenty-five , four years his junior , and realised that it was the first time since his brother Joe 's marriage , when they were seventeen and twenty , that he had had a companion of roughly his own age .
30 And then she read , in a copy of The Stage that happened to be turned in her direction , a paragraph about him which made it clear that the wife whom he was talking about in this present tense had died a year ago , and that he had had a row of flops in London .
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