Example sentences of "he can have [art] [noun] " in BNC.

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1 Robinson Crusoe on a desert island may experience good luck or bad luck ; but he can have no rights .
2 Most important of all , he can have no rights at all against his home state — such matters are ‘ domestic ’ and normally entirely outside the purview of international law , a singularly important limitation in the area of human rights where the master criminal is the victim 's own government .
3 ‘ Then he can have no reason to feel that you have acted contrary to his will . ’
4 Well at least he can have a word with him about it and see what and he can do , and then you go to and see what they can do .
5 So he can have a go on the race track or he do n't have to bother if he do n't want to .
6 He says that the little boy has done so well , he can have a berret !
7 He can have a chat wi ’ you next time he comes .
8 He can have a taxi .
9 Mum if you , he can have a bit of me milk if you like when you , that bit yeah
10 He can have a partner , though only as a secondary figure .
11 Anyway he wants to ask when this tape goes back , if he can have a copy of it .
12 The sign on the door tells the visitor he can have a tooth extracted for a trifling sum .
13 I think he can have a joke occasionally , even about someone as important as Professor Brighouse
14 She said well , tell Grant , she said he can have a reprieve , she said it 's May the eighth and , and she says , she probably heard me say it was Friday and that 's when I thought it was this Friday , so I had to phone erm the receptionist at daddy 's works , so she was going to pass on the message to daddy just to tell him just to work late as usual , Grant , rather than come in at teatime and then go back to work again .
15 Yeah well , he can have the ones what are suitable for him .
16 But he has to wait 12 months to join an NHS waiting list and two more years before he can have the surgery .
17 He 's still kept his but he 's got lived in , all the property he owns he can have the town square , there 's nothing !
18 ‘ But the authorities make it quite clear … that before the constable is in a position to choose between a specimen of blood or a specimen of urine on the defendant 's claim that one or other specimens should be substituted for the specimen of breath , the defendant must be made aware not merely that he can have the breath specimen substituted by some other specimen in general terms , but that the alternative specimen can be one either of blood or of urine , although in the last resort , subject to the proviso to subsection ( 4 ) as to medical practitioners , the choice is that of the police officer .
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