Example sentences of "that he have [adv] [adj] " in BNC.

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1 It describes how Archbishop Lyfing spoke to the king about the freedom of his church , and then rejected Cnut 's offer of a new charter of freedom with the complaint that he had plenty such charters if only they were good for anything .
2 On seeing my person , he took the opportunity to inform me that he had just that moment finalized plans to return to the United States for a period of five weeks between August and September .
3 It also claimed that he had nearly 20 meetings with North between 1985 and 1987 .
4 This was due in my view to the fact that he had rather extravagant notions of the office structure that he should maintain .
5 In order to make this contract you now have to hope that he had precisely 3 Clubs , leaving him with precisely 3 Diamonds and that these Diamonds include the Queen .
6 But as he left , Billy Ray , 31 , indicated to fans that he had only two finger-lickin' minutes to spare .
7 Upon retirement he declared that he had only one regret : his failure to divert the tram track round the sea-side of the Metropole Hotel !
8 At this point I noticed that he had only one nostril .
9 Sri Ramana used to say that he had only one experience in his life ; he spent the rest working it out .
10 One can not help but feel that one of the reasons why Edberg was beaten in his opening singles — without in any way detracting from Nestor 's fine achievement — was that he had so little time for either his body or his tennis to adjust after the journey to another time zone — and surface — from Australia .
11 Soraya wrote in her memoirs that " the European type appealed to him most " , but that he had too much common sense to marry one of them .
12 What he was asking her to do required a degree of trust that he had too little time to earn .
13 But I think Freud would have also gone on to say that he had very good reason for resenting Wilson , because he blamed Wilson personally for the unjust peace , after er Versailles , but er , was indirectly , many people would argue , going to lead to the Second World War , and er , so Freud 's defence I think would be , this man really was responsible .
14 Thomas May 's earlier assumption would have been a perfectly natural one had he been dealing with a museum collection , but here at Templebrough , the sherds came from his own excavation , and the only conclusion to be drawn is that he had very little conception of the significance of stratified deposits .
15 The fact that he had very little free consecutive time for his own writing began to worry him a great deal , and he missed the familiar life of Kensington , with its public house and local shops .
16 Pinkie could still think quite clearly enough to know that he had very little prospect of a new commission .
17 What history will say of his tenure of office is that he had very difficult decisions to make in awkward circumstances and while England 's international team suffered an unimaginable decline most of the 17 first-class counties , his prime concern , flourished more than might have been expected .
18 When the boy was brought before Vortigern it became apparent that he had very special powers .
19 Also I express surprise at the Labour leader 's volte face a short while ago in the press he reported that he had more important matters to think about , or discuss insofar as fox fox hunting was concerned or words to that effect .
20 Tests revealed that he had abnormally high levels of insulin in his blood , which could only have been injected .
21 And the context in which this was er argued er was er the Bay of Pigs invasion of Cuba , a C I A American supported invasion , er which er failed very badly but which certainly indicated the American desire to get rid of Castro and er Khrushchev was asserting in effect that he had as much right to defend an ally as the United States had er to defend erm its allies and in the same sort of way .
22 And the context in which this was er argued er was er the Bay of Pigs invasion of Cuba , a C I A American supported invasion , er which er failed very badly but which certainly indicated the American desire to get rid of Castro and er Khrushchev was asserting in effect that he had as much right to defend an ally as the United States had er to defend erm its allies and in the same sort of way .
23 Dalgliesh remembered that he had always drunk beer ; now he accepted whisky but said he could do with coffee first .
24 They asked him how he proposed to work with Pilger and , to his surprise , told him that he had far more power than Pilger had led him to believe .
25 Most traders offered extensive lines of credit , without interest , to their friends and kinsmen — a wealthy Kufran , for example , reckoned that he had about 30,000 dinars on loan to his friends at any one time — apart from commercial credit .
26 ‘ Yuri 's problem is that he has very fine hair , ’ said Anthony , carefully snipping feathery layers into the rather worried-looking star 's tresses .
27 ‘ I had previously studied Charles 's chart and had noted that he has very unrealistic expectations of women .
28 His weakness is that he has only four or five votes on the committee and his intermittent appearances and lack of involvement in either the Headingley School or the Bradford Academy will count against him , all past prejudices apart .
29 I shall be taken to implicate that he has only fourteen and no more because had he had twenty , then by the maxim of Quantity ( " say as much as is required " ) I should have said so .
30 Is that ending of the arm's-length principle Government policy or is it another example of a Minister , who knows that he has only another five weeks in the job , making a remark entirely of his own without consulting his civil servants , the Arts Council or any of the national companies ?
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