Example sentences of "he have [vb pp] from [noun] [prep] " in BNC.

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1 To ask the Secretary of State for Defence what recent representations he has received from farmers about compensation for the effects of low flying on livestock .
2 To ask the Secretary of State for Trade and Industry what representations he has received from industrialists about the importance of reducing Government burdens on business .
3 To ask the Secretary of State for Trade and Industry what representations he has received from industrialists on Government intervention in the strategic direction and investment in companies .
4 To ask the Secretary of State for Trade and Industry what representations he has received from businesses in the north-west concerning the effects of the recession in industry .
5 To ask the Secretary of State for Health how many representations he has received from patients about NHS trusts ; and if he will make a statement .
6 Even so Edinburgh Academicals have provided Sole with a solid platform from which he has gone from strength to strength , culminating in three Tests and a series triumph for the Lions .
7 While unpacking , he found a chess set ; his father explained some of the moves , and since then he has gone from strength to strength despite the fact that the family has no chess background .
8 Shylock describes the persecution he has suffered from Antonio in Act 1 , Scene 3 , lines 102–104 .
9 But now he has moved from critic to principal player , he may discover the advantages of the business brain so vilified by Raine 's critics .
10 Xorandor explains that he lives on radioactivity , that he has come from Mars in search of food , and that he has been stealing the waste to feed himself .
11 This year Bradl has a new two-year contract with HB and he has switched from Michelin to Dunlop tyres .
12 Mr. Martyn Jones : To ask the Secretary of State for Wales what representations he has had from industries in Wales about the current economic situation .
13 As he has shifted from opposition to support for the Vance-Owen plan , so has Serbian television .
14 During the exchange itself he 'd moved from suspicion to disbelief to disgust and finally to acceptance of Estabrook 's proposal .
15 He 'd grinned from ear to ear , grey eyes dancing .
16 The ground and the weight seemed too much for him and he had retired from contention before the penultimate fence .
17 The best portrait of Chaucer was one he had made from life for his patron 's copy of the Regiment of Princes , where it accompanied Hoccleve 's praise of his master .
18 As for Uncle , he had suffered from rheumatism for as long as I can remember , so , all-in-all , we always had more work than we could really cope with .
19 He died 16 November 1915 at his home in New Cross , south London , to which he had moved from Whitechapel in 1901 , and he was buried in Nunhead cemetery .
20 He tried to remember what the weather had been like in the last week and realized he had no idea ; like many city-dwellers he had moved from flat to car to office without registering any variation .
21 In February 1991 he had moved from Palermo to Rome in order to become director-general of penal affairs in the Justice Ministry , and it had been widely expected that he might head a new judicial body which was to be created as part of a fresh anti-Mafia drive .
22 He had moved from Camberwell to Central with William Johnstone and at his request .
23 Duroc remembered the files he had accessed from Bruyce-Hoare in Denver .
24 He had parted from Felicity on good terms after breakfast ; she had returned to continue her courses .
25 P.A. Stafford thinks that Cnut may have reinforced this by encouraging the cults of other murdered princes , such as Wigstan , a ninth-century Mercian , whom he had translated from Repton to Evesham .
26 He had worked from dawn until dusk without a break .
27 The populace generally played little part in that agitation , but when Wilkes returned from the exile in 1768 to which he had fled from fear of imprisonment , debt and the fighting of a duel , to fight the Middlesex election , he became the symbol of a much wider agitation .
28 The son of an affluent Pakistani landowning family , he had graduated from Oxford in 1963 , with radical political ideas , and few prospects .
29 The antisemitism in Vienna made his appointment to a university professorship difficult , but as he had married when he had returned from Paris in 1886 he needed to make a living .
30 He had returned from Gascony at the end of 1254 , after disastrous and expensive enterprises in France and in Sicily : in the following March commissioners were appointed for the sale of timber in the royal forests ‘ for the relief of the King 's debts ’ , with the assistance of two or three knights and the local Forest officers .
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