Example sentences of "[conj] he have get a " in BNC.

  Next page
No Sentence
1 Although he 's got a good job so Pam said I do n't know why he 's got in that problem .
2 ‘ 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 .
3 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 .
4 that he 'd got a form and he was fetching it back in this afternoon and they was handing it over this afternoon .
5 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 ?
6 The boy told him that he had got a place in a hostel , but that he would be lucky to get into a place like that if it was his first night .
7 So that he had to get a job elsewhere — somewhere much better , ’ said Pickerage .
8 But a man who makes his living playing black music suddenly sporting the flag waved on every Nazi march AND toying with skin imagery ( and like or not , lads , the crop and boots HAVE been adopted by Nazis in the USA and Europe ) AND writing ambiguous lyrics about an issue which brooks no ambiguity AND making idiotic remarks about blacks and black music in interviews AND hankering ( in a curiously middle aged manner à la Gary Numan ) after a nice , homogenous ‘ England ’ that never actually existed AND refusing to defend or explain himself — ALL that means , at the very least , that he 's got a case to answer , surely ?
9 I 'm slightly disappointed in erm , 's attitude , especially his last comment , even though I 'm sorry to hear that he 's got a sick dog at the moment .
10 Only it 's just lucky that he 's got a lot !
11 It 's also good I think for , for cricket in general that he 's got a pitch that helps him a bit on the fifth day and that 's how it should be .
12 Hurry up so that he 's got a paddy on at teatime .
13 Trina knows that he 's got a big schlong .
14 I keep , apart from the fact that we 've got an enormous number of deadlines , but David keeps saying , ’ we must stop ’ , and then people ring us up and say ’ Oh , I , can I do this ’ , and we 've , you know people say , ’ Oh , well , I play the saxophone ’ , and then we find out that he 's got a huge band and he 's very famous , and they 've just rung us up to say , you know , can we play for you for free .
15 Incidentally , the Minister of State knows that he has got a real pressure group round his neck when it comes to disability and the disabled .
16 For he is suddenly , miraculously , aware that he has got a wonderful — no ! — a perfect alibi ; an alibi which has been given to him by the very person he has just killed .
17 Another pointer to this being made up is that he has got a degree , so should have an IQ at least marginally above yer average player .
18 and he 's in inherited a family home , so he 's got a home to live in , but he does n't earn very much does he ?
19 Mercy wants to say , of course , that Cruelty in this god-governed universe is going to be defeated by Mercy , so he 's got a technical problem .
20 He had wanted a male grandchild and he had got a male grandchild ; that should be enough for everybody … [ 18 ] The good news therefore was doubly welcome and caused as much delight at Elmhurst as dismay in Woburn Square , where the John Pontifexes were then living .
21 Here , indeed , this freak of fortune was felt to be all the more cruel on account of the impossibility of resenting it openly ; but the delighted grandfather cared nothing for what the John Pontifexes might feel or might not feel ; he had wanted a grandson and he had got a grandson ; this should be enough for everybody …
22 The egotism of the patriarch in search of an heir is intensified ; and the repetitive , parallelistic form of the new clause ( " … might feel or might not feel … ) matches the parallelism in the following clause ( " he had wanted a grandson and he had got a grandson " ) in suggesting the grandfather 's own emphatic and headstrong style of speech .
23 And he had got a pile of something put on the ground from the er , at your park .
24 That was £45,000 over the odds , even for a brand-new model — and he had to get a secondhand one because back in 1989 the prestige-car market was still booming and the limited supply of Lamborghinis imported from Italy had already been snapped up .
25 They just assumed that , being black , he had n't got any — and he 'd got a degree .
26 And there was a , two friends of theirs who were courting and he 'd got a pimple on the end of his nose .
27 And he 'd say , Well and he 'd got a whole string of Lenin 's books , and he 'd reach down and pick one and turn to the right page straight away , says , This is what Lenin said , and he said , I 'll stand by this , you know .
28 Steenie was putting the show on , and he 'd got a thing going with this bint Veronica .
29 And he 'd got a boy who did stutter and he always used to go to granddad before er he when he came to school , before lessons and he 'd give him this pebble and he 'd say , now you can put it in your pocket .
30 Erm he , I think what he really must have had was er a sort of mild form of polio when he was young and he 'd got a shoulder , not completely paralysed but it was partially paralysed .
  Next page