Example sentences of "[that] he have got " in BNC.
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1 | Ken Ward gave orders to bale out saying how sorry he was that he 'd got his crew into this mess ! |
2 | I gathered from Doone 's face that it was n't the type of answer he 'd expected , but he pulled out a notebook and wrote down the reply as given , checking that he 'd got it right . |
3 | I mean , if I 'd got pregnant he might have thought it was his , that he 'd got better somehow . |
4 | I was talking to that presenter of that alternative-politics programme — what 's his name ? — and he said that he 'd got annoyed with a colleague because she criticized his pink bow-tie . |
5 | ‘ Much obliged for that , Albert , ’ said Joe , and explained that he 'd got a guest and how it came about , although he said nothing about the wallet or the men . |
6 | And the first letter told me that he 'd got stomach upset . |
7 | He went all quiet and un-Oliver-like and admitted that he 'd got the sack . |
8 | Of course , he played war that he 'd got rubbish for his dinner , but he 'd got everything I could give him . |
9 | That did n't stop me from thinking bitterly that he 'd got away scot-free . |
10 | So he certainly did n't pay due care to the pace and the speed and make sure that he 'd got a safe gap before pulling out . |
11 | Then I saw that he 'd got too old . |
12 | After all — had n't one of the things that had made it so difficult to get over Tony been the fact that he 'd got off scot-free ? |
13 | He also had another er , what we call a journey waybill and that , he used to record on there at each termini he used to record the time and the ticket numbers that he 'd got in his rack at that particular time , so it could be seen between certain times that a ticket perhaps was sold between Witton and Rushmere Heath . |
14 | when you when you knew that he 'd got you by the short and curlies ? |
15 | But he knew he was well known for knowing that he 'd got you . |
16 | Now do n't forget , that I said , that in spite of the fact that he 'd got one shoulder higher than the other , he was very attractive to women , and there is running through this story , the suggestion that maybe he was too friendly with Josephine . |
17 | Why should she take it out on him that he 'd got the wrong voice ? |
18 | Of course they would for a start , I have n't done anything , all that sort of business , but he was extremely good and I think the reason that he 'd got admissions quicker than we did , was partly by virtue of the fact that he was the boss of the department . |
19 | that he 'd got out of the creche I think , cos he had n't got it when he went out . |
20 | And that , straight away he come back and said that he 'd got it . |
21 | that he 'd got a form and he was fetching it back in this afternoon and they was handing it over this afternoon . |
22 | Well Marie just said that he 'd got it . |
23 | He told me that he 'd got a good home , or he 'd had a good home , and he just I said why do n't you live there ? |
24 | McLeish made a conscientious note , feeling that he had got himself sidetracked off the more interesting question of Angela Morgan 's capital investment in Yeo Davis . |
25 | On November 21st he told Poindexter , who was advising him that the Justice Department ‘ fact-finding mission ’ was about to descend on his office , that he had got rid of them all . |
26 | And I became conscious that , alongside a genuine pleasure that he had been released , there was also a resentment that he had got away with it . |
27 | It has been said by some writers that he had got caught up in an extravaganza far beyond both his intention and his control . |
28 | Ralph Steadman was said to have run down the street telling passers-by , including bewildered elderly ladies , that he had got ‘ one in Punch ! ’ |
29 | The man in the pub who remembered one of his workmates complaining to Walter that he had got the details of the factory machinery wrong … |
30 | The truth was , he thought ironically , that he had got to the age when it was too late to have splendid dreams and nice thoughts about himself ; the age when childless people feel the lack of children . |