Example sentences of "that [pron] [verb] [conj] [pron] [noun] " in BNC.

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1 ‘ It 's just that I doubt that your grandmother sent you after me with instructions to — to abduct me and drag me to Rome at any cost . ’
2 It was at this point — a year or so into our campaign — that I realized that my efforts were not always appreciated by the other members of the group .
3 But , just before the reader buries the portfolio matrix once and for all , he or she might remember that I said that my case would not be complete until the end of chapter 8 , where more organizational and behavioural matters will be considered .
4 My Lords erm I would only hope that I would be able to do something to my Noble Friend in trying to persuade him that it is n't all that bad erm My Lords I do agree with him though when you I , I think that I 'd be first of all w were to tell him that er not that he would n't be surprised that I thought that his amendment was n't actually necessary , but I do understand his concern , I mean he tries to find his way through the legislation .
5 It is important that it is on the record in the context of Sinn Fein 's reaction to the attack that occurred on Saturday that I understand that its president , Mr. Adams , when asked last night , specifically refused to condemn the bombing .
6 J.D. , Mr O'Connor , has invited me to join his permanent staff of reporters now that I think that my work in the East End is … over .
7 And I think when we talk in terms in getting around to spending the money we have got then we need to look quite clearly about how you make a place more inviting and it 's also about when people come into the building how they 're met what the receptionists like , when they ring up can they get through and I mean I 'm I 'm surprised that 's said about the tickets that I think that our reception ticket areas an excellent area the people working there are first class are very friendly very helpful so it 's trying to get that sort of concept through the building I thin k we work on that I think the building 's kept very clean people who clean the building are very good but I hear what you 're saying and I thinks it 's been said earlier by the lady here by the foyer downstairs she feels threatened when she goes into that bar because I think the whole decor and the way it is is a threatening place I think we need to look at those so that was an old and .
8 The child who comes home saying , ‘ I hate school ’ , learns that it is not everything about school that she dislikes when her mother says ‘ It 's been a bad day today , has n't it ?
9 She says she feels worse now that she did when her husband died .
10 If you are satisfied that there is now no possibility of your marriage succeeding , you must state on the application that there is no prospect of reconciliation and that you consider that your marriage has broken down irretrievably .
11 It 's when you come to do a job like building a fitted wardrobe that you realise that your house is not ‘ true ’ .
12 view is that one hopes that my hopes are that of the direct report you er worked for erm is equal and competent and is erm in a sense courageous and brave and that they realize that sometimes to get the best results you have to do things which are perhaps challenging and orthodox
13 And our feeling , if if my memory serves me right , was that we felt that our site safety courses were adequate and gave
14 Now why is it important that we get When we sort of fire neutron in we get at least one neutron coming out ?
15 How do we set about getting the true beliefs that we need if our actions are to succeed in fulfilling our desires ?
16 Thus the power of advertising is such that we believe that our lives will be unbearable unless we possess the latest dishwasher , video recorder or television set .
17 Er I would , I would echo that , that we feel that they money has been paid in for work or services done by the employer and by the er fund members themselves have contributed and I do n't think it belongs to either of those parties in any more , it 's held by the trustees to pay pensions , if for nothing it 's been put there just to pay pensions , it 's not a piggy bank for er for companies to draw out with the with their tame er trustees allowing it , it it 's money the trustees hold in in trust and I believe that 's the law at the moment and er I I think we would like to see that confirmed in any new law .
18 Some pensioner constituents have written to me to say that they think that their cost of living is rising by more than 4.1 per cent .
19 Then it roared and tried to stand up , and it was n't until it was nearly upright that it found that its feet were tied very firmly to the legs of its chair .
20 The party who supplies the infant does so at his peril ; it will not avail him that he did not know that he was dealing with an infant , or that he thought that his position in life was such as to make the goods necessary , or that he did not know that the infant was already sufficiently supplied .
21 I had the feeling that he thought that his father did n't look after Lou well enough . ’
22 They would have to wait only very slightly more than a second between the astronaut 's 10:59:58 signal and the one that he sent when his watch read 10:59:59 , but they would have to wait forever for the 11:00 signal .
23 In striking down the law Duplantier made it clear that he hoped that his decision would provide the opportunity for the Supreme Court to overturn the landmark 1973 judgement Roe v. Wade which provided the foundation of legal abortion in the US .
24 It was only in the last six or seven years of his life that he discovered that his talents lay elsewhere : in polemics , above all , and in what Waugh in his letter of thanks for Animal Farm had called ingenious and delightful allegory .
25 There is a man falling , yes , but nowhere is it stated that he fell because his leg had been injured .
26 It was then , too , that he found that her meeting with the King 's mother was over — happily , as she told him , smiling ; although her welcome would not be complete until the King himself left St Hilarion and sent for her .
27 The relief was so great that he found that his hand was creeping across the table towards hers .
28 Thus we might say that the sceptic implicitly claims to know his conclusion that knowledge is impossible , or that he claims that his premises justify his belief that justified belief is impossible .
29 We all have reason to regard him , the causes that he espouses and his beliefs highly .
30 But could that not be a new chance for a man to find in later life ‘ an emotional experience that he missed when his children were young ’ ?
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