Example sentences of "[vb infin] [that] [pers pn] [vb past] [prep] [noun] " in BNC.

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1 Many subsequently returned to their homes , all over the Soviet Union , where the local doctors may not know that they worked at Chernobyl and may therefore not recognise subsequent cancers or other problems as radiation-linked .
2 Your audience must know that you finished on time , without knowing how you did it .
3 What 'll her experience that she had in New Zealand ?
4 It would appear that they formed in order to capitalise on certain perceived economic benefits .
5 On the assumption that the account of this event in Molla Husrev 's life is at least broadly correct , however , and in the light of the documentary and such other evidence as exists , it would appear that he left for Bursa not earlier than Rajab 876 nor later than Shawwal 877 and returned to become Mufti perhaps as early as 878/1473–4 .
6 How does it show that they arrived on Planet Zog today ?
7 One of the reasons they all became friends was that Wally 's mum and dad did n't mind that he bunked off school all the time .
8 But you will remember that we ran into trouble if we pressed that point to its logical conclusion .
9 Yeah because if I work it out I 'll just know that i it made so and so but I wo n't know that it gave off that I 'll just remember that it made like zinc chloride or something I wo n't remember
10 In the first stages , the first winter , I do n't remember feeling cold at all ; or , at least , I do n't remember that I suffered from cold any more than anyone else did .
11 Mr Barnes was delighted to hear from him , which made Peter suspect that he knew of Coleby 's interest in 29 Champney Road .
12 Her father 's habitual mild-manneredness , which usually protected him from responding , became brittle and porous when he was in contact with his daughter : Miranda could see that he reacted to Xanthe 's silkiness as if she were n't a clear , sparkling water , but a fiery solvent that he , for all his well-preened feathers , could not resist .
13 He was better known as a spirited champion of atheism , so many people do not realize that he believed in God until he was eighteen .
14 You 'd certainly never guess that he suffered from arthritis … that was the chair cracking … not his hip .
15 Only after the event was over did we discover that he had in fact contributed to a booklet produced just before the 1987 general election by the Society of Conservative Lawyers .
16 First I 'll divulge that I went to Bristol — they 'll know that already if they 're bright enough — then I 'll say I went to this Bed and Breakfast — then I looked for a job …
17 I do n't mean that they went on strike , it was well , ‘ let them buggers do it-they 're the ones in the position let them do it ’ .
18 ‘ Mainly cooks and cripples , ’ he said cheerfully , and the family hoped that this would mean that he stayed in England , but when he returned to London after his leave the battalion was made up to strength and moved to Howick in Scotland .
19 I can mention that I spoke to Maurin at his gallery . ’
20 This led to another form of coaching , I just can not remember how my interest in tennis arose , save that I used to practice for hours against an airman 's table top fixed to the netting of an old tennis court .
21 ‘ It would seem that I fell in love with an illusion .
22 It was unbearable that the gallery girl should imagine that I belonged to Syl , that his glances and suggestive remarks had ensnared me .
23 So I think that you could say that I arrived in Jesselton in a mood of pleasurable anticipation .
24 It is conceivable that on a charge of rape a man might argue that he had in fact meant to perpetrate an act of buggery and that the sexual intercourse that took place was unintended .
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