Example sentences of "[that] [pers pn] have [verb] [pron] the " in BNC.
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1 | Now you 'll all know that I 've told you the truth ! ’ he shouted . |
2 | ‘ Now that I 've told you the truth , you do n't need to fear . |
3 | He was aware that I had disliked him the day before and seemed anxious to make me change my opinion . |
4 | The mere fact that I have set myself the end X , with Y as a necessary means to it , and without conflict with other prudential or moral considerations , does not guarantee me from being mistaken in doing Y ( Anyone who supposed that it did would indeed be guilty of the Naturalistic Fallacy without appeal . ) |
5 | Rainbow admits that I have told her the tale of the Gittel affair , and why Anya called down the curse in the first place . |
6 | But I was not sure that she had told me the whole truth . |
7 | She did n't realise that she 'd given me the greatest gift of all . |
8 | ‘ What matters is that she has given us the most glorious production we have ever had at Hochhauser . |
9 | Did I say that she 's given me the diary ? ’ |
10 | we 've got a hundred grams divided by twenty eight pennies , the answer is whatever it comes to grams per divided by pennies , grams per penny , so that 's a good check that you 've got it the right way up , before you go and calculate it you just have a little look , what have I got here ? |
11 | Remember that you have denied yourself the possibility of making an income for at least three years . |
12 | The request that you have done me the honour to make , to receive the record of my voice , is one that I cheerfully comply with so far as lies in my power ; though I lament to say that the voice which I transmit to you is only the relic of an organ the employment of which has been overstrained . |
13 | Until now , we have discussed financial reporting in terms of the organization , and it has been implicit that we have understood what the organization is and what its implications for accounting are . |
14 | It 's a compliment in itself that they 've given me the chance … ’ |
15 | He has been so accurate , some claim , that they have dubbed him the ‘ historian of the future ’ . |
16 | Northampton have been so suitably impressed by Ross 's abilities that they have offered him the coaching job for the next two seasons , a post that he has accepted . |
17 | With the usual lack of euphemism , the overseers enter the rubric ‘ Dead ’ against her name at the beginning of 1786 ; their accounts for 10 January indicate that it had cost them the grand sum of 3s. 9d. to bury three paupers : ‘ West Wife ; Titford and Robbans ’ . |
18 | So continuous is this precipitation that it has earned itself the name of ‘ marine snow ’ . |
19 | You 'd travel down to the game on a Saturday , and if you met a Leeds fan at the train station , you could be sure that they were the best mate he 'd ever had , and they 'd tell you all the latest gossip that he 'd told them the last time they were out for a few pints . |
20 | Regretfully , the young gentleman told him that he had quoted me the price to the trade , and for a retail sale it would be slightly more expensive , i.e. £36 plus VAT . |
21 | It was obvious that he had forgotten who the man was . |
22 | ( So the crew would protest ) ‘ that he 's bought us the best — |
23 | I am sure that he has recorded what the hon. Gentleman said . |
24 | It does not have to be that he has conceived what the French are calling the coup de force for Miss Jonathan . ’ |
25 | Mr Heseltine can reasonably say that he has done what the political reality required of him . |