Example sentences of "he had [vb pp] a [noun] " in BNC.

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1 There was a case where a householder escaped a claim for civil damages after he had stabbed an intruder with a bayonet !
2 I had observed with what relish he had improvised a rape — of a Soviet actress — for a scene in one of our novels .
3 He had broken a bone .
4 Omero knew exactly what she meant as he had broken a tooth as a result of eating rock given to him by visitors at Easter , and sometimes it really hurts .
5 He had his back to me , and he had grown a beard , but his hair was still thick and blond .
6 To mitigate his appearance , he had grown a beard — though it was so fine , to conform with custom , that it might have been painted on with a kohl-brush , an impression reinforced by the methodical severity with which the rest of the face had been shaved .
7 Grunte then asked them whether they had heard the one about the Norwegian woman who had bought her son three shoes , having been told he had grown a foot ; a sally which was met by universal groans .
8 He was waiting on the Jackley Road outside a pub called the Ostrich , Kevin 's double in every particular until he had grown a moustache .
9 He had grown a moustache in order to look like Ian Botham and he drove a 1960s Jag like Inspector Morse .
10 He had grown a lot in the last few months .
11 He stopped trembling as quickly as he had begun a moment before and seemed to withdraw down the dark passage to the daydream he was locked in when they first arrived .
12 To add insult to injury , he had even turned down paying pupils in order to give free lessons to Aloysia ; and with supreme lack of tact he even described how he had begun an aria for the tenor Raaff , only to turn it into one for Aloysia instead .
13 When Archelaos died he had begun an intervention in Thessaly which , had it been carried through , might have pre-empted Philip 's operations in the 350s .
14 Fowler , who arrived a few minutes later , was middle-aged ; he had stayed a detective constable ostensibly because he could not pass the examination for sergeant , but his colleagues claimed that he deliberately avoided promotion .
15 As the Lent term progressed , besides his letters to Helen and Harry ( containing verses , some of which survive ) and his quick recovery from his failure to gain an entrance scholarship to Merton , he had renewed an acquaintance with MacAlister — an old Pauline friend — who visited him each Sunday .
16 He was not , in fact , an exponent of the martial arts , but for a few short but character-forming weeks during a university summer vacation he had boxed a kangaroo called Cobber in a travelling circus .
17 Lower down the page he had scribbled a quotation from Shelley : ‘ Life stains the white radiance of Eternity ’ .
18 At the beginning of the previous month , he had given a reading in New York where one observer described him as a " hot ticket " .
19 All too typical , however , was Lord Keith 's remark in 1799 that he had given a lieutenant 's commission to ‘ the Duchess of Atholle 's friend Glen Geary … a heavy dog too ’ , while passing over a brighter but less well-connected midshipman .
20 Here was the women whose father he had unsuccessfully defended , to whom he had given a home and a job , who was supposed to be devoted to him .
21 Finally Mozart was able to report to his father that he had given a concert , and that his takings , before expenses , were 90 gulden .
22 He had given a picture of religion , which represented it as primarily concerned with guilt , with taboos against incest , and as er , representing the origins of civilization in primeval societies like those of the Australian Aborigines , and Freud erm , remarks in the opening pages of Civilization and Discontents that Totem and Taboo was never meant to be a complete theory of religion .
23 He had given a speech earlier in the year on the subject of ‘ Constitution Reform in Trinidad and Tobago ’ , at the end of which he appealed for mass action and now he was testing the dedication and organisational abilities of his P.E.G .
24 He had just returned from addressing the UN General Assembly in New York where he had given an assurance that democracy was now firmly rooted in Haiti .
25 However , David Lloyd George decided that a majority of one was not sufficient , even though he had given an undertaking to implement the majority report .
26 Some time previously , he had discovered a system of cryptography — he called it the ‘ Atbash Cipher ’ — which had been used to conceal certain names in Essene/Zadokite/Nazarean texts .
27 All around him , backstabbing and financial disaster fomented chaos , inside he had discovered a universe of beauty and order .
28 Lambert looked at him with such energy that for a moment Killion thought he had discovered a way out of it .
29 He had discovered a method of intercepting springs , and , using stone to seal his drains , he and others like him set about spreading the gospel of effective underdrainage .
30 Perhaps he had discovered a seam — did you have a seam of garnet ? — and had come back secretly to exploit it , and …
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