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

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1 He has all-round skill and good prospects of a medal in Barcelona .
2 We are in London 's trendy media haunt , the Groucho Club , where he has that day become a member , his celebrity enabling him to jump a one-year waiting list to his evident delight , and where he is promoting his new BBC travel series Pole to Pole , a sequel to the successful Around the World in 80 Days .
3 I mean , he has that hate of other things and other people outside his own type .
4 He has that selfishness — it 's not even an honest selfishness , because he puts the blame on life and then enjoys being selfish with a free conscience .
5 Then it gives me great pleasure now to erm I always knew that John al , has had something different from the rest of us you know he has that kind of air does n't he , that that status in the pulpit which you know , ?
6 Yes , we all know that he prefers consensus rather than confrontation and I suppose maybe because he has that kind of style he might be just what the doctor ordered for the nineties .
7 He now brings an action in the High Court , in the course of which he gets an order for discovery , B is compelled to disclose the documents which he has that support A's case , and A may be allowed to administer interrogatories to B — questions in writing which B must answer also in writing but upon oath .
8 He has that Attila the Hun touch which rarely goes over big in diplomatic circles . ’
9 ‘ Frank S again showed that he has that combination of speed and strength that first team coach Egil Olsen is looking for .
10 He has one daughter , married to a well-known Politician — Vivian Carolan , who is Minister of Fine Arts in the present government .
11 He has one objective : that the delegates get the very best from his personal contribution .
12 He has one rig in our room , another one in dad 's car and a third in the big truck he drives for the frozen meat company .
13 Dead metaphors also have a certain syntactic rigidity ; the quality of being ‘ dead ’ is closely tied to a particular syntactic form , and with any modification the metaphor springs to life : compare He has one foot in the grave and One of his feet is in the grave .
14 He opens the door no wider than an old lady would , and I notice he has one foot firmly behind it just in case .
15 Now , ten years later , he has one brother recently dead , the other two years ' inside , the whole of his south London empire in decay .
16 He has one Department , and Scottish Members are expected to scrutinise his actions .
17 He has one complaint every time he comes and sees us .
18 He has one hand over Andy 's face , clamped tight ; his head is turned away from me , red hair fallen down over one ear .
19 We have been here five months and he has one month left to complete his sixty .
20 If Mr Kravchuk listens to their counsel , he has two choices .
21 Now he has two air ambulances — a twin-engined plane and a helicopter .
22 Currently he has two museum shows running in Europe devoted to his famously demanding — in terms of sheer weight and mass — sculptures .
23 From this position he has two options on how to play the short ball .
24 He has two race-horses owned
25 Now of course he has two failures to build upon .
26 He has two chances of avoiding extradition — slim and none , ’ wrote Judge Frank Altimari , one of the two dissenters .
27 He has two sons by her , both grown , and lets no man look at her twice . ’
28 he has two sons and two daughters , one of whom has recently made him a grandad and , although he confesses to still having the odd game of cricket , his main pastime nowadays is deep-sea fishing .
29 As his title suggests , he has two functions .
30 Now he has two metal rods in his back .
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