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

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1 ‘ Well , there 's just Mr Foster , 'e 's got the other two rooms on this landin' .
2 To an astonishing degree , the controversy about him has taken the form of a continuing debate about his private life .
3 Erm I think I 've learnt how to do it , it 's fairly straightforward but er him having tied the leader on for me I wo n't have to go back to him anyway for quite some time .
4 that she could could make the tea or something you know , him having put the cups out and everything and I I put the teapot there and said put two tea bags in it and she just
5 Rosenberg 's poems from the front show him to have absorbed the great tradition of English pastoral poetry , but his tone is different : more impersonal , informal , ironic , and lacking the indignation characteristic of the work of Wilfred Owen and Siegfried Sassoon [ qq.v . ] .
6 Why , then , was John Titford a member of this glorified Home Guard when , at the age of 23 , we might have expected him to have joined the regular army or to have found his way somehow into the militia ?
7 He had too , she realised , although she had been too absorbed in her own clumsy , hopeless awareness of him to have taken the fact in until now .
8 One wore a black felt hat , and his shoulder-length hair and beard were silver enough for him to have known the beatnik era .
9 Wing Commander J.M. Gilchrist had been appointed Bursar and Clerk to the Governors in 1962 , and to him had fallen the task — in addition to his ordinary duties — of arranging the financing of the numerous building programmes .
10 And around him had arisen the sight — seen so often on his travels — of the hundreds of thousands of vagrants , beggar men , women and children , now roving over the richest island in the world like tormented souls in irredeemable exile …
11 If he 'd been on the train and had walked with the other racegoers towards the station , Filmer could have seen him through the window … and just the sight of him had caused the tensing of the neck muscles … and if Filmer had n't yet paid him for whatever … then he would come back to the train …
12 He wished that one of the journalists who 'd interviewed him had expressed the substance of his life and work in such up-market , romantic terms .
13 She was herself the daughter of a rabbi , whose father and grandfather before him had upheld the light of Jewish learning in their part of Poland .
14 For one thing , many of those who had opposed him had joined the Royalist army and had been killed in the war .
15 This new Rose who had descended upon him had joined the gaudy throng , for reasons she would n't divulge , and had lost some of her individuality .
16 Formerly , Alick Nkhata and men like him had adapted the western popular music of the time , particularly country and western music , which they married with traditional melodies and themes .
17 He said that , during the 20-minute journey to the quarry at Furnace on Loch Fyne , a lit cigarette had been used to burn him on the back of the neck , he had been struck constantly , and as the car travelled at speeds up to 70mph , the man beside him had opened the door and told him to take his chances and jump .
18 And every day Allan and Barbara and the doctors treating him have to face the dilemma of keeping alive the boy they feel would be better off dead .
19 It fills him with strange satisfaction to think that while the great illumination of the Market Square is quite invisible from this point , the little lamps of Iron Green can be seen glowing through a gap beyond Albert Road , It is many years now since he has visited the lower end of Odborough , for his legs will not carry him up and down the hill , and he growls like a dog if anyone suggests a car .
20 Generally , the settlor , once he has created the trust is functus officio .
21 He has ploughed the land many times and could have set something off at any time .
22 In doing so he has to maximise the output from his land as he is subject not only to man-made economic vagaries but also to climatic variations beyond his control .
23 Some days , when it 's damp , he has to use the stick inside , too , and I can hear him clacking about the uncarpeted rooms and corridors of the house ; a hollow noise , going from place to place .
24 The answer is that , while he is not alone , he has misunderstood the purpose of civil awards of damages .
25 He has noticed the enemy approaching .
26 Not only has the right hon. Gentleman made an idiot of himself by that intervention , but he has achieved the interesting feat of misquoting himself .
27 In the period since his appointment , he has merged the two companies , their products and the sales force into the single organisation that is in operation today .
28 But he has heeded the advice .
29 He has corrupted the boy and been an awful influence on him . ’
30 THE OTHER reason for tuning into Moran 's Manson opera is to hear how he has deformed the music of The Beatles to fit inside the mad brain of Charlie .
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