Example sentences of "[noun] [coord] [conj] he is [adj] " in BNC.

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1 It is sufficient if he is shown to be intentionally using violence or if he is aware that his conduct may be violent .
2 I am delighted that he sees the benefits of competitive tendering and that he is anxious to ensure that further education colleges should get the best value for money .
3 ‘ But you know already that he is held within the Dark Ireland and that he is captive in a deep and subtle enchantment .
4 He is also a National junior squad coach but until he is 18 he will have to fulfill that position under the supervision of chief instructor Andy Sheridan , 4th Dan , for insurance purposes .
5 A defendant who does not believe in consent could either be one who fleetingly turns his mind to the issue of consent but since he is indifferent to the matter forms no view at all or one whose indifference is such that he entirely fails to think about it in the first place .
6 ‘ I would think that whoever took those things is very worried indeed now to find that I was with Harry and that he is alive .
7 Francis initially wants Wegerle on a month 's loan but if he is successful it could lead to his third £1million move .
8 ‘ It is with trifles and when he is off-guard that a man best reveals his character . ’
9 His aim is to be the first President of Corea and since he is 72 and has few more years left in which to realise his ambition he will use any means to hand including , if time presses , the blood of his deluded followers .
10 Nevertheless , in the absence of a reservation the landlord may find that he is unable to display advertisements on his adjoining property or that he is unable to redevelop adjoining property economically if those activities would involve a trespass to his tenant 's airspace ( Kelsen v Imperial Tobacco Co Ltd [ 1957 ] 2 QB 334 ; Woollerton & Wilson Ltd v Costain ( Richard ) Ltd [ 1970 ] 1 WLR 411 ) .
11 I know that my right hon. and learned Friend keeps in close touch with the chairmen of the training and enterprise councils and that he is aware of the concern , particularly in the south of England , about the largesse that occasionally appears to be shown to the north .
12 Learning occurs not because the person is somehow ‘ ready ’ for the next stage but because he is able to organise the incoming information in a satisfactory way .
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