Example sentences of "he have [prep] [adj] [noun] " in BNC.

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1 ‘ It 's the best thing I 've done , ’ he says of 010 , as he has of other books .
2 What impresses me in Messner is the combination he has of immense boldness and analytical power .
3 To ask the Secretary of State for the Home Department what information he has on new initiatives undertaken by car manufacturers as part of his strategy to defeat car crime .
4 I mean nobody pick him up on that , but I mean , he might mean in real terms with , I do n't think he has in real terms .
5 Surere could not disappear in the way that he had without powerful help .
6 Nicholson 's commemoration also rests with the intriguing interactions he had with other chemists , and raises questions on the objectives of chemical research which are still relevant today .
7 You know how deeply involved he got with it ; he had on other books .
8 He might also have said , as he had on countless occasions , that although he had constantly looked to the British for advice , he distrusted them acutely .
9 He had on ripped jeans , a sweatshirt and an old pair of training shoes .
10 He claims , with every semblance of sincerity , that whereas he had on previous occasions deliberately sought out these wretched and exploited females , this time he had no thoughts of fornication in his head .
11 That he had on previous occasions overcome his antipathy to women is suggested by remarks he made to others .
12 On this ground the proceedings of the licensing court were either reduced , or the pursuer 's averments were held relevant , in the following circumstances : when two of the members of the court had been employed by the applicant as part-time barmen for a number of years , without remuneration apart from money gifts at holiday periods : McDonald v. Fin lay ( supra ) ; when three of the members of the court were shareholders , and one was a director , of the company owning the property for which the certificate was sought , and when that company was closely allied with another company , the officials and directors of both being the same persons , on whose behalf the certificate was applied for : Blaik v. Anderson ( 1899 ) 7 S.L.T. 299 ; when a member of the court had recently been a shareholder of the company on whose behalf the certificate was applied for , and he had on previous occasions himself been the applicant on the company 's behalf , he being an avowed and pledged advocate of the company : Ower v. Crichton ( 1902 ) 10 S.L.T. 271 ; when members of a court had , in their capacity as members of a local authority , and with a view to street improvement , taken an active part in negotiating the purchase of licensed premises from brewers , who agreed to pay a sum of money to the local authority if a new licence were obtained for other premises , such as the subject of the application : R. v. Sunderland JJ. [ 1901 ] 2 K.B .
13 Pearce could have done with more than the seven years he had at British Aerospace to achieve the kind of management culture he would have liked to have bequeathed to the company .
14 The machine was n't fit for this purpose so he had to good case to go back to Dixons and ask either for a replacement or his money back .
15 Various sources claim that before age 20 he had amongst other things , rediscovered and proved the law of quadratic reciprocity , discovered the double periodicity of elliptic functions , proved that every positive integer is a sum of 3 triangular numbers ( these are integers of the form unc where n ε Z+ ) , formulated the principle of least squares and conjectured the prime number theorem ( itself not proved until 1896 ) .
16 23–7–1867 Duncan Fletcher was suspended because " he had in public manner brought reproach on the profession of the Gospel by an unbridled tongue . "
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