Example sentences of "he have [verb] the [adj] [noun pl] " in BNC.

  Next page
No Sentence
1 In the period since his appointment , he has merged the two companies , their products and the sales force into the single organisation that is in operation today .
2 To date , he has received the most commissons of any architectural ‘ mousequeteer ’ : three at Disneyland , Florida , one in Burbank , California , three at Euro Disney .
3 Even when answers start to emerge , it will be some time before those who depend on the industry for a livelihood — and that includes at least 100,000 Scots — will know whether or not he has sent the right signals in a climate of fierce international competition for scarce oil industry investment funds .
4 ‘ A consultant should be able to help you because , unlike you , he has faced the same problems elsewhere , ’ he said .
5 By surmounting , so he tells us , one set of obstacles in being accepted by the Balinese , he also creates the rhetorical conditions where we are likely to favour a belief that he has surmounted the theoretical obstacles attended on his methodological discovery as well .
6 Barnett will however know in his own mind that he has to replace the 2,000 runs scored by the departed Azharuddin if Derbyshire are to be effective challengers .
7 He has seen the Peliatan dancers on tour , hung his walls with posters of that photogenic island , bought records of gamelan music .
8 Partly because , it seems to me , his life is so much more important to him than his work , and he has seen the dreadful consequences of the solitary confinement some writers and artists consider the sine qua non of their trade .
9 One question that the newly appointed editor Tim Marlowe ( of the Tate 's education department ) will have to decide is the editorial stance of the magazine : he has to balance the curatorial concerns of the Tate with issues that would appeal to a general reader while treading an ideologically independent path .
10 He has described the vulgar pastimes of football , bull baiting , etc. and revealed the extent of gentry encouragement and patronage .
11 But Neil Kinnock has endorsed the McNamara line on this issue and he has endorsed the main arguments used to justify it .
12 Where the applicant has failed to attend a previous hearing the court may refuse to hear his renewed application until he has paid the previous costs thrown away , which the court may assess for that purpose ( Thames Investments & Securities plc v Benjamin [ 1984 ] 1 WLR 1381 ) .
13 He has allowed the Ugandan Asians , whom Idi Amin expelled in 1972 , to return and reclaim their businesses .
14 He has to experience the awful consequences of his addiction , including the withdrawal of parental rescue operations , before he will have the motivation to stop .
15 On occasions when he is developing thought about contemplative prayer as an experience where man feels his faculties of reason and will to be at rest , informed by a loving knowledge of God , or about this experience both restoring what man lost at the Fall and anticipating the life to come , he acknowledges that he has outstripped the immediate needs of his particular audience : " has no fully seen what it is , for is opened " ( 46.319a. – 119 ) .
16 Mr Salmon told me that he 'd heard the best barrows were being sold off in the Old Kent Road , on account of the fact that so many young lads were heeding Kitchener 's cry and joining up to fight for King and country .
17 And I always remember he said said to me , he 'd placed the biggest orders for pencils , of course in them , there were no ball pens , er he he received that from the London County Council by accident .
18 At least he 'd kept the vital figures away from her .
19 He loved sex too much to condemn any expression of lust , and though he 'd discouraged the homosexual courtships he 'd attracted , it was out of indifference not revulsion .
20 He was brilliant : he 'd assembled the right elements .
21 He 'd spoken the last words in Italian , and in Italian as fluent and colloquial as his own she answered , ‘ I 'm sorry about that .
22 Through the heart-shaped cutout in the shutter , he saw the Land-Rovers disappear into the dip where he 'd felled the small trees .
23 I 've actually seen erm er been in a workshop as a participant where a chap who was excellent at this had what he did was while while the participants were doing some sort of an exercise he was actually making these tiny notes up in the top corner for himself so that when he when he came to the next sort of section that he wanted he 'd he 'd got he 'd got the odd notes just up there in the corner .
24 ‘ He sent him back to the pub ; he sat there for a while , and when he came back he 'd got the front shoes on .
25 Would he have flung the bitter allegations and repeated the damning indictment of her which he had made at the time of Simon 's death ?
26 Should he have mentioned the strange symptoms and side-effects he had been observing in his own case ?
27 He said a bargain was a bargain ; he had found the treasure , he had risked the Caliph 's wrath , and he had killed the three assassins .
28 Gauci had remembered the sale so vividly that , almost ten months later , he had given the Scottish police a probable date for it , 23 November 1988 , and provided a FBI videofit artist with a detailed description of his customer — he believed , a Libyan .
29 Feelings , the Collector now suspected , were just as important as ideas , though young Fleury no longer appeared to think so for he had given up talking of civilization as a " beneficial disease " ; he had discovered the manly pleasures to be found in inventing things , in making things work , in getting results , in cause and effect .
30 The Movement took against him , not so much because he had neglected the bureaucratic niceties , but more because he was ‘ a weedy , conceited , unattractive young man ’ who did not respond to exhortations to join the war effort ( presumably by swapping his camera for a pick and shovel ) .
  Next page