Example sentences of "have tell [pers pn] the [noun] " in BNC.

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1 Ephron has told him the land is worth four hundred shekels .
2 Well , these days I can reach the highest shelves of the house library , and walk into Porteneil to visit the one there , so I can check up on anything my father says , and he has to tell me the truth .
3 She 'd told him the nurse was coming to see her lawyers and make a statement at the end of that week .
4 Travis could n't have looked more sceptical if she 'd told him the world was flat after all .
5 If they did report a rape and they 'd told him the woman opposite , at the top last night er , next week come back .
6 ‘ If you 'd told me the truth about that years ago , none of this wretched business would have happened . ’
7 He had said to Mr Kuntar : ‘ You could have told me the truth from the very beginning .
8 But my present belief is that if Profumo had come to me for advice ( and my advice , of course , would only have made sense if one postulates that Profumo would have told me the truth ) , I would have recommended that he should throw in the towel ; assert that he had no intention of allowing his private life to be discussed in public ; apologise to the Prime Minister for the embarrassment he had caused both to him and to the party , and withdraw rapidly .
9 But you should have told me the truth from the beginning .
10 You reckon Hatton would also have told him the river bed was full of stones one of which would make a suitable weapon for knocking off his informant ? ’
11 She was gaping at him while telling herself that her mother would have told him the reason why she was here .
12 If I 'd known you were prone to nightmares I 'd never have told you the story ! ’
13 John will have told you the way we operate er we we we er we
14 " Would he have told you the name of one of his attackers , and might you have recognized that name … ? "
15 The letter which you received from the Director of Education will have told you the reason for the Council 's decision to refuse a place at the school(s) you wanted your child to go to .
16 I should have told you the Huns have balloons the way you have the runs , but they are short of skilled observers ?
17 Later , after returning home , in bed with his wife , the merchant taxes her about not having told him the monk had given her the money ; she claims that she thought the money the monk gave her was gift , and that she has already used it to buy clothing ; she will pay , she says , her debts to her husband in bed .
18 They are narrative , and tell us of a situation , or prepare us for some significant message : Once having told us the story , set the mood , and prepared us for the shout of a choir of angels , Handel could paint a triumphant musical fresco with just a few poetic words :
19 And you 'll have to tell me the name of your
20 He did n't have to tell me the rest .
21 ‘ I think she ought … to have told him the truth — or else refused him …
22 He 'd liked the story well enough , admittedly , given a fairly good display to his half-dozen column inches yesterday ; but when Mike had told him the press conference to which Briant had agreed could make a much better story , he had n't seemed to think much of it .
23 He told the doctors all about how my dad had come back to life in this grey cardigan and had told him the secrets of the universe .
24 He had never forgotten the day in the bide shed when Nutty had told him the horses were going back to the knacker 's , and the fearful panic that had exploded inside him , worse than any brushes with the police or his father , worse than anything he could ever remember .
25 Kenneth had told him the story , years ago , about when Fergus put Lachy Watt 's eye out ; he 'd stuck a fossil bone in it , or something .
26 Cora-Beth had told him the night before that there were letters and cards awaiting him from England , all of which had ‘ Not To Be Opened Until 5 Jan. ’ on the envelopes , so she had extracted a promise from him to leave them on his bedside table until this morning .
27 He longed to see the majestic height of a nobleman 's banquet hall and to eat swan stuffed with capons and quail as his mother had told him the gentry did .
28 They had told him the chaprassi would want a bribe , but instructed him not to pay it .
29 He was the one person within his household who had told him the truth ; he had been his eyes and ears in the community , voiced the opinions of the man in the street .
30 ‘ Who is he ? ’ he kept repeating over and over again , stony-faced and disbelieving even when I had told him the truth .
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