Example sentences of "that [prep] [adv] [pron] have [verb] " in BNC.

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1 It would be good to make Ken Harris admit that for once he had suspected the wrong man .
2 it 's not pronounced in mine , but , some er they say that with where it 's gone away , you know , there 's all sorts of things that can prove it I mean the obvious thing is we came from somewhere did n't we ? , we did n't just drop here with a flash of light and er they 've studied plants and other animals and they evolved .
3 I realised that until recently I had thought very little , had taken life at face value , as though , until I was born , nothing on the earth had moved .
4 I knew that from when I 'd gone to watch them play in the past , but I 'd been cured of insomnia for some time now .
5 Their view was that at least they had secured the best possible conditions for the temporary workers ( equal pay and , as far as possible , fringe benefits ) and/or had made sure that their use was kept to a minimum and was subject to continuous monitoring .
6 and she put on the back of this one she was thankful that at least I 'd managed this time to get the mark in the area where it should have been in the first
7 Well , thought Fenella , it seems that at least I have found the right spell .
8 He comforted himself with the fleeting thought that at least he had met Sir James Selkirk , who had found Alexander III 's corpse , and wryly concluded he would question him if the opportunity presented itself .
9 I was vividly aware of the far reaching and vast contribution that Basil had made to education , to values , to the good influences of the Authority on teachers and children , colleges , schools and students , and I am of the privileged few who were able to work with Basil in the early days of struggles , so I know how much , how very much he did — So I felt that at least he had fulfilled — as nearly as we can ever judge — so much of his life 's work even to the developments in his own personal creative medium — and this must be a comfort to you as well as to us who knew him as a friend and colleague .
10 Although no evidence of his activities before 1643 survives , we know that by then he had married , had established a house and warehouse at Leadenhall Street , and had brought over many of his relatives to work for him in England .
11 Assuming that by now we 've chosen between twist and braid , we now come to the matter of cross-section and the drag it creates .
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