Example sentences of "[verb] [pron] [vb infin] that the [noun sg] " in BNC.

  Next page
No Sentence
1 Hayling had let them know that the move would complicate his personal life .
2 D' you think that the Government in Calcutta is prepared to leave us to our fate ?
3 The actual state of the market is that it 's flooded with property , so we have a case where supply has increased , demand is still at a fairly low level , so we 're having to be very honest with our clients , our vendors , and let them know that the situation is that their property has to be of good value in the market place .
4 Let me add that the council tax is partly personal and partly property-based .
5 And having accepted it , let us admit that the book that gives this experience to the individual young reader who needs it or will benefit from it , may not be what we ( outside the experience ) might recognize as a ‘ classic ’ .
6 Let us assume that the survey is fine .
7 Floyd 's Algorithm works with the adjacency matrix representation of G. For convenience , let us assume that the vertex set of G is so that G is represented by a variable A of type
8 To complicate the situation , let us assume that the package under consideration is itself called up from a higher package with a different manager .
9 Let us assume that the economy inherits a real wage rate w 1 .
10 However , let us assume that the habit is broken .
11 To take a specific example , let us assume that the production function all of a sudden shifts ‘ upwards ’ .
12 Let us assume that the directive is fully supported by the Government , who do not wish to amend one jot or comma of it and who are willing to sign up to its immediate implementation .
13 The sentence has 28 characters in it , so let us assume that the monkey has a series of discrete " tries ' , each consisting of 28 bashes at the keyboard .
14 Let us assume that the value of child benefit , currently at £7.25 , be doubled ( as is proposed as part of the tax changes in chapter 19 ) .
15 Let us suppose that the proportion of any additional income absorbed as leakages is 0.6 .
16 Let us suppose that the vehicle is found abandoned in a wood , seriously damaged or completely burnt out .
17 Let us suppose that the survey is concerned with leisure activities and is a comparison between social classes .
18 In order to illustrate the effects of taxation , let us suppose that the government imposes a tax on labour employed in the retail sector , so that and become and , respectively .
19 Let us suppose that the contravener sold to an investor 1000 shares at a price of £100,000 .
20 Let us suppose that the lady did not die , but was whisked into obscurity .
21 Let us suppose that the vowel is .
22 Let us hope that the choice of Manchester for the next Davis Cup tie will provide more interest than the last match against France .
23 Let us hope that the lesson has been learnt and that never again shall we see this vile practice recur .
24 Let us hope that the electorate sack them in April .
25 And let us hope that the reader , on summing-up this look into the past at the Gorbals of yester-year , may say : ‘ These were real people , ordinary men and women , whose passage through the Gorbals not only added colour to a drab area of this Scottish city , but whose presence may remain a lasting influence for good . ’
26 So let us hope that the association is long and fruitful .
27 But before the idea is condemned out of hand , let us remember that the price of petrol has just been brought down by 18p a gallon .
28 And let us remember that the State of the Union depends on each and every one of us . "
29 Let us remember that the printing press never wrote a single book .
30 Let us imagine that the traveller has at his disposal a computer , far ahead of present possibilities , into which — we assume the behaviourist position -is continually fed all , and much more than , his own information about himself and his situation .
  Next page