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

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1 His breathing is laboured in that heavy way which so often heralds the end , and as you grip his hand to let him know that he is not alone , you try to love him as the Lord himself would do .
2 A High Commission official has interviewed Selahattin Ozberk , 30 , and a doctor who examined him said that he is potentially suicidal and has scars which appear to be from beatings in Turkey .
3 He insists that there is more to the emancipation of black people than opposition to racism .
4 Written out of both , he insists that he 's not ready to be written off in Sheffield Brightside where blind Labour candidate David Blunkett protects a 24,191 majority over the Conservatives .
5 First , he argued that it is highly artificial to construe all consumption as a response to needs ; while this approach may seem illuminating when it is applied to the consumption of individuals , it can not plausibly be extended to productive consumption , which has to be treated as ‘ the consumption which satisfies the needs of production ’ , if the theory is to be sustained .
6 He argued that it is too simplistic , and indeed ethnocentric , to dismiss such peoples as irrational and unscientific .
7 While he strongly believes that violence produces results ( presumably by dramatising the point in question ) he agrees that it is morally wrong .
8 She makes no acknowledgement of their affair in public and he understands that he is not to refer to it with these new acquaintances .
9 He thinks that it is more important to convince doctors that ‘ teaching ’ is a broad term and covers much of what they do every day and to ensure that they receive adequate training and support to carry it out well .
10 He found that it is not unusual in some industries for prices to individual buyers to remain unchanged for several years .
11 He adds that it is not in the traders ' interests for the elephants to die out .
12 Professor Simmonds is correct when he says that it is very hard to isolate the part played by railways in the growth of towns and the development of the countryside from all the other economic and social factors of the nineteenth century .
13 He says that it 's not worth staying on if the place is going to be wrecked .
14 He says that it 's very spectacular .
15 He is probably also right when he says that he is only seen as a Spanish artist because his interest lies in Spanish art , instead of in French art ‘ like everyone else' : in other words , within the accepted categories there is no room for a Mexican who is interested in Spanish art . '
16 He says that he 's always wanted to work as an artist at Slimbridge — it 's a lifetimes dream come true .
17 He says that he 's very disappointed .
18 He says that he 's very popular with everyone .
19 He says that there 's somewhere to park , and the grub is cheap .
20 I AM writing in response to Mr. Gage 's letter in September RW&P in which he says that there is not a proper step between the club rugby and international rugby in England and that there will be too many league matches for top players .
21 He says that there is not any coal in Ila , but to this day there are those who say that some coal was found at Daill and used by a blacksmith at Bridgend , although there is no evidence from where this was obtained .
22 He says that there is not any coal in Ila , but to this day there are those who say that some coal was found at Daill and used by a blacksmith at Bridgend , although there is no evidence from where this was obtained .
23 Will he ensure that it is not unfairly excluded as a result of the foreign dumping of inferior chain ?
24 He warns that there is not uncommonly a great deal of rain after midsummer , between the hay and corn harvests , which diminishes the likelihood of satisfactory ‘ air ’ ; the hardy traveller will be recompensed by flitting clouds , mists and roaring waterfalls .
25 First , he assumes that it is not correlated with permanent consumption .
26 He repeated this over and over , as if he believed that it is only " they " whoever they were , told him how to act , then everything would be all right .
27 At this point in his work , Freud would be much more acceptable to modern thinkers , for he shows that he is not deriving man 's destructiveness from a similar instinct in animals .
28 He himself admits that both the continental staff and the locally recruited waitresses are skilful , but privately he regrets that it is no longer possible to find enough male British waiters , as he feels this would ‘ look better ’ .
29 In this paper Cayley 's concern was with systems of elements satisfying the equation unc and for both n = 4 and n = 6 he showed that there is essentially just one other system besides the set of complex nth roots of unity .
30 Instead , she guides him to check his suggestion and when he realises that he is not successful , she skilfully involves him in the final solution to the problem .
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