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

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1 I only want him to say that I 've done well in finding somewhere for us to be ! "
2 And er as I say , the only people I know on here now , are people that I 've met actually off here .
3 The sight of a word processor so terrifies me that I 've stuck rigidly to scissors and adhesive tape , while a genius of a lady in Twickenham makes sense of my appalling first drafts .
4 As I understood er Mr 's position , he would have been on behalf of the Parish Council who are the only er people who are concerned about this as I understand , who raised an objection at this er at this stage they they would have been quite happy with the proposition that I 've put forward on behalf of the County Council .
5 And then how would I have felt , she asked herself as she hurled the jeep down the motorway , finding that I 'd fallen again for a man as cold and hard as that — finding out when it was too late what he was really like ?
6 The evening was cloudless and warm and after pitching the tent and cooking something called " Hunter 's Goulash " ( a freeze-dried meal that I 'd brought home from a trip along the Appalachian Trail — it tasted like fried sofa stuffing doused with monosodium glutamate ) , I walked up the narrow lane above the youth hostel to watch the sun going down behind Pikedaw Hill tingeing the sky a dusky orange — a wonderful sight .
7 ( Now was not the time to say that I had danced only on the boards of my Leeds bedroom … )
8 Ron was delighted too , saying that I had run well after my lay-off with injury and had beaten one of my main challengers for the European title .
9 They had stolen my good oilskins , but the thieves had never found my small stash of money which had been hidden in a redundant sea-cock , nor had they found the old Webley.455 revolver that I had hidden deep in Masquerade 's bilges .
10 She added , ‘ He 's very good to Margaret ’ , and I felt that simultaneously she had nodded towards the past while affirming the present and that I had fallen somewhere between the two : nothing but the body of a ghost , nebulous and deserted .
11 I wrote that I had done so before going to Athos .
12 For myself , I pretended that I had left home with full approval , inventing for myself a Harrogate doctor father , fleshing out an imaginary family … .
13 About five weeks before that I had come home in my first university term , and got undressed for my bath in front of the bathroom mirror .
14 Whatever it was , I began to be aware of all the doubts , of all the rational thoughts that I had put away in my pursuit of ‘ complementary ’ medicine .
15 They were spreading rumours that Mac and I knew the starter and that I had got away with a false start .
16 My actions may or may not have been right and , as I said in court , I wish with hindsight that I had thought more about the late take-up .
17 At this juncture , I realized that I had driven close to the point where the boat had landed me the previous evening .
18 The increase that I have announced today to some extent reflects weaker trading conditions and the recession .
19 He was absolutely right to welcome the substantial increases that I have announced today for a range of programmes .
20 The fairest statement that I have seen recently of the prospects of recovery was the one in the Greenwell Montagu Recovery Watch bulletin a few days ago .
21 This is a point that I have made often in the House and on which I think that I have the support of the Adam Smith Institute which I hope will also be supported by many Conservative Members .
22 The following description of the scientific method by a twentieth-century economist conforms closely to the naive inductivist account of science as I have described it , and indicates that it is not a position that I have invented solely for the purpose of criticizing it .
23 However , my hon. Friend can be assured that I have listened attentively to what he has said and his points will be considered carefully before a decision is made on whether the application should be called in .
24 It is the first letter that I have had here in a year … ’
25 Then , three months ago , he had suggested that she had done enough for himself and the boys .
26 She knew it would wound his dignity that he had been forced to skulk abroad while she had saved the firm — never mind that she had done so in the most unbusinesslike and outrageous manner .
27 The source says : ‘ She went on to say that she had done more for the Royal Family than any of its other members .
28 Of course ; he did n't know that she had stood there in the darkness and listened to the proofs of his betrayal .
29 He had watched until the night nurse had left the office and now he was as sure as he could be that she had gone below for a meal .
30 It was this ruthless clarity and brightness that she had run away from .
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