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

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1 At least he 'd made someone happy , he thought drily , regretting that he 'd snarled at the lad in front of him .
2 All 180 kids gathered right at his feet and he did a completely different show from any show that he 'd done in the sell-out places for five or six thousand .
3 By this time , Lewis had shown Morse the yellow A4 sheet ; and Morse had seemed so delighted with it that he 'd turned on the car 's internal light in transit .
4 That he 'd arranged for the bank to cash cheques on his and my signature until all this is settled . ’
5 I smiled , nodding my head , not unhappy that he 'd jumped to the wrong conclusions , but surprised that he did n't know the secret of paying by instalments .
6 Carson pulled out his pad and tried to read the shaky notes that he 'd made on the Underground .
7 Then there were the bruises on his knees and elbows that he 'd received from the fall over the trip-wire at Jacqui 's .
8 He had mistaken it for an ashtray and I watched from the back seat as he painstakingly flicked his ash on to the small pile of dead matches and cigarette ends that he 'd accumulated in the bowl of the vent .
9 " He could have given me a ticking off , considering that he 'd gone to the trouble of telling me that you were coming .
10 In the bay-windowed room Forester locked the door behind him and closed all the curtains before turning to the rod case that he 'd laid on the bed .
11 The Tibetan was talking in loud self-congratulatory tones about the religious statues and paintings that he 'd smuggled across the border and sold in India ; how time and again he 'd outwitted the border police , with silver , musk and contraband of every sort .
12 He took out the keys that he 'd brought from the office back home , and opened the door .
13 It turned out that he 'd inched along the parapet — a thin one about six inches wide — and had a good peek at us through the windows .
14 He bent down and picked up a carrier that he 'd lain on the floor .
15 Mrs Margaret Jones : ‘ David arrived home carrying the statuette that he 'd won at the song contest that he 'd been to with Ken Pitt and dashed straight upstairs to see his father who had n't been well for a number of days .
16 Suddenly he remembered the owl lamp that he 'd knocked in the night .
17 He was n't about to tell the Yank that he 'd also been duped , that he 'd sat on the information for nearly twenty-four hours .
18 She was aware that he 'd rocked with the insult , but was too furious and shaken to care .
19 He wore the same black clothes — baggy corduroys , heavy sweater , working-man 's jacket — that he had worn through the Sixties and Seventies .
20 The little boy was wearing the same neat grey flannels that he had worn on the first day Robert had seen him , and , when the sun struck his face , he smiled up at it as if in gratitude .
21 The last they heard was that he had gone over the wall for two years .
22 After travelling to the little mining village and speaking to Brown 's mother , ‘ I then set out to find him , having been told that he had gone to the pit with a barrow to fetch some coal .
23 Fran exchanged pleasantries with her , curbing her impatience before finally asking if she knew where Luke had gone , and went weak with relief when the other woman informed her that he had gone to the old college .
24 Mr Brownlow explained that he had run after the boy only because he saw him running away .
25 He told me that he had fallen into the water with Compeyson , and then been hit by the ship .
26 Everyone thought that he had fallen into the river and been carried away .
27 30–3–1884 Alex McLeod , Lightkeeper , Rhuvaal Lighthouse stated that he had fallen into the sin of fornication but he desired the privilege of baptism of his child .
28 In testimony and published accounts he had insisted that he had argued against the proposition of selling arms to Iran and had believed that the idea had been abandoned .
29 They were no doubt relieved , as Theo definitely was , that he had escaped from the clutches of ‘ that woman ’ .
30 I watched Schanberg in Phnom Penh struggling almost schizophrenically to divorce himself from the celebrity that he had become over the years and re-enter the personality he had had before .
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