Example sentences of "he have [verb] [pron] [det] " in BNC.

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1 He had hoped for some more kumquats , the man in the bed next to him having peeled them all .
2 He has placed them both on the sofa under the magnificent painting of a Ramayana demon by his Thai protegé , not facing one another across his huge desk , to indicate that this is an intimate and informal interview , not to be taken too seriously whatever she says .
3 He has to wear them all the time , but he does n't wear them all the time
4 He has ignored them all .
5 Since the Forties he has led his own big bands , noted for their driving swing on up-tempo numbers like ‘ Flying Home ’ , and for the leader 's exuberant showmanship .
6 It is significant that one of the few occasions when the author of Ancrene Wisse hints at the contemplative experience occurs in his account of the behaviour appropriate at the Mass : ( After the kiss of peace in the Mass , when the priest communicates , forget the world , be completely out of the body , and with burning love embrace your Beloved who has come down from heaven to your heart 's bower , and hold Him fast until He has granted you all that you ask . )
7 Largely because of absentee owners , the gardens at Shotover have changed remarkably little ; Sir John Miller has n't changed much either , though he has made his own — living — additions to the grounds .
8 He has heard it all before , and he has his own opinion .
9 all these drugs he 's been having , so they gave him some er tablets and er , he said on Sunday he was in such pain , so he said try these , he has given me some before , but er , you 're supposed to take two and I was only taking one
10 And he has given us this command : Whoever loves God must also love his brother ( 1 John 4:18–21 ) .
11 Characteristically he has given it all away .
12 A year later , the local press was singing his praises : ‘ He has done what some people thought could never be done — make the buses pay .
13 But he has done himself some damage and will need to work hard , and with some care , if he is to secure re-election to the shadow Cabinet in November .
14 ‘ If he has done you such injury this fellow must be held to account . ’
15 Idomenée ( 1712 ) shows that as time passed Campra was more prepared to feature remoter keys when expressing emotional tension : its chilling dénouement , in which Idomenée becomes aware that he has slain his own son , is in B♭ minor , with modulations to D♭ major , G♭ major and E♭ minor .
16 Today , it is removed , because he has become his own man , with his own government .
17 He has told me all he had to tell .
18 He has told me all your story , or as much as he knows .
19 He has told me that … ’
20 He has told me some very important things . ’
21 He also has the rather unenviable job of being the go-between between the leadership and us , which means he has to tell us any things which ‘ are not done ’ ( for example that I ill-advisedly introduced Confucius into one of my examples ) , and also has to clear any demands we make with the leadership .
22 In addition , he has pursued his own passion for the painted interior decoration of this particular kind and scale of East Anglian yeoman farmhouse — a type of house that , only a few years ago , was hardly considered worthy of notice , so complete was the obsession of historians with work by named architects .
23 During that time , he has pursued his own path , favouring lyrical abstraction at the expense of changing fashion .
24 He has got his own clinic in his house .
25 ‘ And now he has changed us all !
26 First he has to beat his former club , QPR , tomorrow night in the Coca-Cola Cup — a competition that can take Wednesday back into the UEFA Cup .
27 He has taken his own life in a dramatic gesture which some have described as futile . ’
28 THE super-rich Duke of Northumberland has banned charity tea ladies from his castle — because he has opened his own cafe .
29 He has to build his own resistance to infections and he ca n't do that if he never meets them .
30 ‘ Only to tell you that your uncle , Mr Eyre of Madeira , is dead , that he has left you all his property , and that you 're now rich — only that , nothing more . ’
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