Example sentences of "[that] [pers pn] [vb mod] have [det] [noun sg] " in BNC.

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1 That I would have enough money to get started in anything I really wanted to do ; that he thought I had enough guts to be a success if I put my mind to it .
2 What on earth made me imagine for even one second that I would have enough strength to confront Luke ?
3 But a mathematician should be taught to try to take me with him , so that I may have some appreciation of what he is doing , and why he enjoys doing it .
4 Do n't bother doing that I 'll have that money before I goes
5 But I promise you that I 'll have some fun on the way .
6 I told him this evening that I must have some daylight .
7 This was surely the coldest and draughtiest station in the country , and I always had to wait there about midnight ; and I used to pray that the train would stop with a door opposite to me , so that I should have some chance of getting on at all .
8 My request was dismissed with some amusement by my parents who added that I should have more sense than to believe in all that mumbo-jumbo .
9 She could recall his hard masculine looks with such clarity of detail that she did n't think that she would have any problem in recreating the image on paper .
10 Larissa , 40 , became a teacher so that she would have more time with her children , but she spends most of her spare time in queues .
11 I do not expect to have to remind a senior staff nurse that she should have more consideration for my dining-room staff ! ’
12 However , you must realise that you 'll have less stop and control ; play for the openings between greenside bunkers , and hit for the fat part of the green .
13 And i and of course when she worked When Mum used to work in Nottingham you could er be assured that you 'd have some bacon on a Saturday , and Sunday , because she used to call at T. N. 's in Street , and buy sixpenny worth of bits of bacon .
14 Try to have both roof and side vents so that you can have more control over the greenhouse environment .
15 I do know that you will have more peace if you can grasp how crucial relinquishment is , how utterly safe it is to place your children in God 's sure hands . ’
16 A further advantage is that you will have more flexibility as to when you can retire .
17 Capitanchik : Will it also mean that you will have more training programmes for these people now that they are more permanently employed ?
18 The first priority , however , is to ensure that you will have enough income for your own needs .
19 The vital thing is to know what you are getting into before you get into it and to make sure that , even with the slow payment , it is still a good deal and that you will have enough cash to survive until you are paid .
20 Whatever your circumstances , the point is that you should have enough money coming in in the Income column to meet the outgoings in the Expenditure column with , hopefully , a bit left over for rainy days and holidays .
21 There are enormous numbers of possibilities when you got over the thought that you must have some sort of fabric at the windows .
22 We seek to rid ourselves of the awful thought that we might have some responsibility for what has happened .
23 Promotions of labour-saving gadgets encourage us to save time on household chores , so that we 'll have more time for leisure and recreation .
24 We discussed erm erm other places for people to meet et cetera has actually been closed down , some some problem with the is n't it , erm but they ca n't use it for the public so erm that was , it was just left that we 'll have another meeting in March and looking around for alternative places to meet , but that 's all to report on that .
25 They were but it , well it was an event , a big event in , in the , among the younger people anyway in Brooks in Willenhall then and er it was really lovely , really lovely I forget if we had to pay to go in , but er we had er we saved up for a good few weeks before , so that we would have some money to spend at the Wakes it was one of the an event of the year then , but erm I used to like Willenhall Wakes and er I used to go dancing a lot well I was allowed to go dancing cos I 've always loved singing and dancing you see and er I was allowed but I had to be home before my father got home , but I was n't always .
26 The important debate in my opinion that we shall have this Committee stage and it is for that reason and also because for four-and-a-half years which I think is regarded as a very long time , I was answerable for police affairs er with the Home Secretary in another place , as the Noble Lord , Lord Callaghan will remember , many years ago , it goes back to January nineteen fifty-eight when I became Under Secretary and he was political advisor to the Police Federation and we very rarely disagreed I 'm happy to say .
27 But Mr Edmonds said : ‘ I believe that we must have some boldness and imagination in our policy .
28 By the nature of the case , the hypothesis that other apparent persons enjoy feelings which are like ours but which are necessarily unobservable by us is not one that we could have any evidence against .
29 And I think we were all slightly sort of surprised that we could have this sort of effect .
30 No , circumstances make it very desirable that we should have this talk , and continue in close touch afterwards , if you 're agreeable .
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