Example sentences of "[adv] [adv] that he [verb] [pron] " in BNC.

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1 If at times Hope needed women to a point of desperate madness , so , at other times , he ached for wealth so badly that he heard his inner voice crooning for it , like the ululation of a gin-addicted street beggar , the sound suddenly there but as if never absent , an ancient and ineradicable longing .
2 He coughed so badly that he found his way to the bathroom and took some Liquafruta cough syrup .
3 Louise was on a normal double decker bus with over thirty of her schoolfriends when the driver appeared to be angered by their continually ringing the bell ; so much so that he took them on a six mile detour .
4 After Colonel Charles Maynard died , his widow remarried to the Earl of Rosslyn and found herself ‘ not on cordial terms ’ with her ex-father-in-law : so much so that he cut her out of his will , leaving all the family property to his granddaughter Frances , and so much embittering the family that Frances 's mother ‘ feared the abduction of myself and my baby sister . ’
5 One of the somewhat older guy , he can orchestrate it so much so that he gets his gold out of it .
6 Worried , she fussed around him , so much so that he gripped her hand .
7 But no warning could check Arthur Conway 's fury , and with a lightning leap he managed to grip the young man 's throat , and so fiercely that he forced him backwards , only the next moment to have his arms snapped downwards , when he would have fallen on his back if he had n't come up against the coalhouse wall and , unfortunately , a shovel that was propped there .
8 Her father loved her so much that he gave her everything , and never scolded her .
9 John wrote these words : ‘ God loved the world so much that he gave his only Son , so that everyone who believes in him may not die but have eternal life . ’
10 Someone touched his elbow so timidly that he thought it had been accidental , until the gesture was repeated with more insistence .
11 These days she was glad of any invitation to proximity , and curled up beside him so promptly that he gave her an amused sidelong glance as he took her hand in his .
12 His face was flushed , his eyes glinting with excitement ; he seemed to be having difficulty breathing , too , and he spoke so rapidly that he slurred his words .
13 It was only later that he realized he had destroyed a Max Ernst .
14 Some extreme theorists , such as Eric Midwinter , carried such arguments so far that he held it wrong to enter children from deprived backgrounds for any kind of examinations , since they were bound to fail .
15 In spite of herself she stirred so sharply that he felt her astonishment recoil upon his own flesh and set him trembling .
16 When he picked me up and put my head in his mouth , I shouted so loudly that he dropped me .
17 The other point which is made by the defendant is this , he says that the plaintiffs have been guilty of delaying tactics er during the course of this litigation , the result of which has been that er he has not been able to realize his interest in the partnership premises , also he has not been able to acquire a partnership premises and he he , doctor mentioned to me that to the actual conveyance of the partnership premises he 's , he tells me was only produced I think thirty and er that er it was only then that he realized there might be a chance that he could acquire the premises for himself , but he says that er because of the general , I think the case is , because of the general conduct of the plaintiffs in delaying the trial of the action one way or another , er the practical effect has been that the plaintiffs have had the benefit of use and occupation of the premises at which he erm , a main view , has a lot of that interest and that they are getting benefit of the kind from that occupation and he is not getting any money in res in respect of that , at least nothing like any market rent because it maybe that there is a fairly small er payment being made , but I 'm not too entirely clear whether that is the case or not , but the stock bond is suggesting that the plaintiffs have been obtaining benefit of the use of the premises at his expense and in those circumstances it is unfair er in , in , or otherwise not appropriate that the plaintiffs should be entitled to obtain interest on their bill of costs , in respect essentially of the period of delay , and when I say period of delay included that the period during which the forward of Mr Justice remained erm unprotected .
18 He was handed his first full England cap against France in February and shut out Eric Cantona so comprehensively that he held his place for the European Championship finals .
19 Her prodigious roarings and weepings would be licensed in her mind by the examples of St Mary of Oignies ( whose book she had heard in an English translation ) , St Bonaventure , St Elizabeth of Hungary and an unnamed priest she had heard of who wept ‘ so wonderfully that he wetted his vestment ’ .
20 It is not enough that he believes them to have been stolen : Haughton v Smith [ 1975 ] AC 476 ( HL ) .
21 And although other people were certainly present they seemed to have faded to some other level of reality , very far removed from herself and this bulky , swarthy man who was letting her know , without a word , not only that he had her , but that should he now refuse to open the trap and let her in she would plead with him to do so .
22 The general principle contemplates a model of a patient of an age recognized as endowing him with the competence to exercise a valid choice , and who is lucid in the sense not only that he regards himself as being in control of his mental faculties , but also that he is recognized to be so by others .
23 in the marriage relationship it 's not just that he says I have taken you , and all that you have now is mine , I take your debt and I discharge it fully , your debt of holiness to God , your debt of righteousness to God , he says I take it and I pay that price in full !
24 She told us just now merely that he said he had a gun but you you remember that it is a hand gun .
25 You knew perfectly well that he held me responsible for Eddie 's death as well as other things ! ’
26 The sergeant would go sniffing around so that he showed he knew what you were doing .
27 Through her own trusting innocence she was alone with a man who 'd stated quite clearly that he wanted her .
28 The Minister said earlier today that he hoped it would be accepted that the Government had come to the House in good faith .
29 ‘ Are you all right ? ’ he said , moving round so that he had his back to the others .
30 Mr Reynolds was also given information about the operation and what would happen to him afterwards so that he knew what to expect .
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