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

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1 I mean obviously once she 's been through the learning process herself , so Doug came away feeling quite pleased that he 'd made that contact and he also sort of made one or two , he , he had one or two wise observations I think about the evening , he made one or two new contacts himself and the suggestion and things , he spoke very well about it , at our committee on our last meeting last week
2 On the odd occasions I met him , I felt that he 'd adopted all these trappings to keep off a world with which he could not cope .
3 No point in taking trouble with him ; no point in explaining that he 'd walked all the way up to the blooming rectory to set his mind at rest .
4 ‘ Simon told me , last night , ’ began Gazzer , ‘ that he 'd smashed that kiosk up .
5 He began crying and shouting — that he 'd known all along she was having an affair and was planning to leave him .
6 The boy , who ca n't be identified , hit the headlines in June … after revelations that he 'd spent several weeks at his grandparents ' house on the Costa Blanca at tax payers ' expense .
7 She had always suspected that he 'd had little time for any brain power that she might possess — just as she had always known that her chief value for him had been the almost instantaneous sexual desire they had felt for each other .
8 Cos Michael started it , he said we 're never said anything when we set off in the car , and then he said that he 'd had this fax from me and er Andrew said , well it was n't actually from , er , from me to the , it was fetched up to me and I sent it in the office .
9 ‘ Oh , he decided that he 'd had enough and wanted to go back to being a teacher . ’
10 Bri and I assumed that he 'd had enough of his countrymen and wanted to tune out .
11 So he made a cup of coffee ( realising , sensibly for once , that he 'd had enough alcohol ) , and sat down in the low upholstered chair with wooden arms that was one of the room 's few comforts .
12 Was this a hint that he 'd had enough of her company for tonight ?
13 And I says only that he 's gone to back to J J and I says , and that he 'd had enough .
14 They told us that he had insulted most of their friends , and that he dearly loved a political argument .
15 Constance , who felt that he had said this a thousand times before , usually shrugged impatiently .
16 She had not told her son to keep away from the course because she had not been aware that he had gone that way .
17 The first point which everybody had overlooked was that Wordsworth hoped ‘ to make money ’ with Lyrical Ballads , and presumably thought that he had gone some way in making concessions to popular taste .
18 He knew , though , that he had to let that anger die a bit before he confronted Sandra .
19 Part of it , some writers supposed , was a longing for heroes in an age without them , for cleavers of Gordian knots ( as the Wall Street Journal called North ) possessed of simple and shining certitudes ; at the end of North 's testimony even Inouye concluded that he had become another man destined for some piece of important marble in Washington , alongside Lincoln .
20 And at the same time the racing of her blood was only partly fear , and she could see that he knew it , that he had discovered this power and tuned it to performance pitch , that the insults were a kind of invitation , the display of force a plea turned upside down , and she also wanted , because she longed to please , to take off her clothes then and there and let him down from his prideful pose , and soothe him with her obedience to his rage .
21 By notice of appeal dated 2 January 1992 , the child appealed against the order on the grounds , inter alia , that the justices erred when they found that he was likely to suffer significant harm as a result of his absconding as no evidence had been produced that he had suffered such harm when he had absconded .
22 It seems that he had suffered some ill health as in his letter to Lord Burghley in 1585 , he complains of being weak and sick .
23 Although Miller stated that he had collected most of the information from well-known authors and always acknowledged them , there are instances when the first person indicated his own contributions .
24 felt that he had to justify this long
25 The affronted lover tried to interrupt , to insist that Gaby was under his protection and that the arrangement was impossible , but Modigliani insisted that he had painted several portraits of Madame in the nude that would be worth ‘ thousands ’ one day and pressed one on her luckless lover .
26 She sensed his fear and , perceiving that he had placed this construction upon their encounter , pressed herself closer to the soft protuberance of his cock , touching his balls with her cheeks , one side and then the other , wheedling the while .
27 Bachet said that he had checked this for more than 300 numbers but did not know how to prove it .
28 A German Ambassador once remarked to the author at a conference that he had referred several times to his constituents , ‘ whereas we in Germany believe in institutions ’ .
29 His firm sent him for a month to another part of the country , and at first he telephoned home every night ; but three weeks later she got a letter saying that he had met another woman and was planning to marry her as soon as possible .
30 Algerian official sources denied that he had met any opposition groups .
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