Example sentences of "he have [verb] [pron] all " 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 to wear them all the time , but he does n't wear them all the time |
3 | He has ignored them all . |
4 | 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 . ) |
5 | He has heard it all before , and he has his own opinion . |
6 | Characteristically he has given it all away . |
7 | ‘ He has told me all he had to tell . |
8 | ‘ He has told me all your story , or as much as he knows . |
9 | ‘ And now he has changed us all ! |
10 | ‘ 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 . ’ |
11 | he has marked it all out when it 'll take him |
12 | He has worked it all out . |
13 | ‘ A fil-thy temper — he has thrown them all out , he has thrown them all out of the window . ’ |
14 | ‘ A fil-thy temper — he has thrown them all out , he has thrown them all out of the window . ’ |
15 | But from what he 'd heard it all broke down every year and had to be started up again in the spring , and — ‘ I do n't know , ’ he said . |
16 | He 'd he 'd done it all , he was happy enough then . |
17 | He got there at four o'clock he had four fish he could catch I think out of the ten for the week cos he caught the others and he 'd caught them all by half past four . |
18 | Even after bidding a fond farewell to Ben and Carole Meadows , there still had n't been the opportunity to have anything other than a few brief casual words with Ross as he 'd driven them all back to New York . |
19 | So he 'd had it all the time . |
20 | Maybe I 'd set him at ease by saying ‘ g'day ’ , but he looked like he 'd known me all his eight years , and leant quite steadily on me for the drive to Robert 's parents ' cottage , where we arranged photos . |
21 | He 'd known it all his seventeen years . |
22 | I should have known better ; he 'd worked it all out , planned it move by move , just like when he was playing chess . ’ |
23 | There was a ring of sadness in his voice which she found puzzling until she remembered something from the past — Eddie 's voice repeating what he 'd told her all those years ago at the Oulton Park circuit . |
24 | I should have thought he 'd told you all about it by now , or do n't you two ever communicate properly ? |
25 | The point is , though , no matter how badly people might say he played that week and won — everybody 's going to miss a few fairways ; Tom Watson was just as erratic in 1983 , that 's his game and he 's no mug — he 'd got it all worked out . |
26 | He 'd got it all wrong , thanks to John — he had some mad idea James was my lover . |
27 | ‘ He 'd got it all wrong . |
28 | But he had given it all up and returned to the business world as a marketing executive . |
29 | Matisse and all the others saw the twentieth century with their eyes but they saw the reality of the nineteenth century , Picasso was the only one in painting who saw the twentieth century with his eyes and saw its reality and consequently his struggle was terrifying , terrifying for himself and for the others , because he had nothing to help him , the past did not help him , nor the present , he had to do it all alone and , in spite of much strength he is often very weak , he consoled himself and allowed himself to be seduced by other things which led him more or less astray . |
30 | He had supported them all their lives and what had they ever done for him except wait for him to die ? |