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

  Next page
No Sentence
1 The Collector had shown such enthusiasm for its hollow wonders that he himself had been tempted and misled ; he had allowed his own small stirrings of doubt , which he recognized now to have been stirrings of conscience , to be smothered .
2 Drachenfels found that he who listened correctly could see , hear , smell and even taste every act of wickedness that took place within the chambers and warrens of the building .
3 When he was twelve , his psychic sense blossomed and he realized that he himself was one of those whom he had learned to loathe , taught both by his personal tragedy and by the missionaries .
4 But I do n't think that he himself would see it as a failure at all .
5 On Oct. 23 Shamir announced that he himself , rather than Foreign Minister David Levi , would lead the Israeli delegation at the conference .
6 Having been reminded that the bookies ' smoke signals usually signify a lot more than just grandiose waves of their Havana cigars , Ramsden then revealed that he himself might have been inadvertantly responsible for the Travelling Light rumour .
7 He added that he himself must ‘ inevitably live with the knowledge that I am now more likely to develop cancer ’ .
8 So er it was decided that he it would be one man because he would give a hand .
9 ‘ How near is madness to genius ’ , said Diderot ; while Dr Johnson , confessing that he himself had often been nearly insane , commented that ‘ all power of fancy over reason is a degree of madness ’ .
10 and sew the seeds that there has been procrastination going along , and we 've got some very good ideas to offer his people , and we would like to er er and hope that he he will erm encourage his people to erm , get along and meet us .
11 She needed to remember that he himself had been responsible for her having had to face that terrible choice in the first place .
12 Erm , we are today , going to do the Black Sheep of the Family , erm , because erm , erm , does n't feel that he he 's up to doing the one that he thought he would do this week .
13 And er it was said that he he was he 'd been away ill .
14 It is tempting to adopt the view that the husband should convey " as trustee " , thus implying that he himself has not incumbered the property ( see Law of Property Act 1925 , s76(1) ( f ) , Sched 2 , Pt VI ) .
15 He grew very portly as an old man and although by this time he had become something of a legend to the other members of his club ( " The Hero of Krishnapur " ) , one might have thought that he himself had entirely forgotten about the siege .
16 They may even believe that he who pays the piper calls the tune , and that PFK editorial is slanted towards one or another manufacturer .
17 We know that he himself referred to the daunting shadow of Beethoven 's greatness — and we can assume that public expectation was just as daunting , given that he was regarded as Beethoven 's heir .
18 ‘ I hear that he who is scarred is he who is honoured , being graced by a Brother 's nick upon his cheek — a nick like a dainty bite , like a loving kiss .
19 In that pensive pucker of Brother Yeremi 's lips Lexandro sensed that he himself was now becoming a focus for Valence 's hypocrisy …
20 But his father decided that he himself would marry a third wife , and that his son could wait another year or two .
21 Murray decided that he himself would go after the usurper , as was suitable , the lawful Regent after the false king , with perhaps one thousand hard-riding Border mosstroopers who knew the country , whilst the rest of the Scots army went on down Annandale after the main enemy force .
22 He decided that he himself , at any rate , would be perfectly candid and plain .
23 Although disapproval of sacred dramas continued to be vehemently expressed , as , for instance , by Gerhoh of Reichersburg ( 1039–1169 ) who , according to Kolve ( 1966 ) , warned that he who portrays the rage of Herod is guilty of the very vice he portrays ( a deep-seated objection not entirely eradicated today ) , anxiety about its blasphemous nature was dispelled as more people came to regard it as merely a ‘ game ’ rather than as a sacrilegious act .
24 Gradually he began to believe that he himself had turned into a parrot .
25 Paragraph seven making it clear put that an initial assessment has already established er it has already passed the preliminary assessment stage er and that er the director is undertaking the data collection procedure so that the site can be properly assessed and I do drawn er Mr attention er to that I erm have taken the opportunity during the last adjournment Chairman to speak to Mr about the appropriateness of the wording of his er er amendment and I believe that he he may wish to er move something which is slightly different er which will certainly er we 'll deal with that er if he does move that but er it clearly is the intention of this report and of the committee that when the work has been completed on the assessment of traffic calming measure in Shalford and its priority established , that we would then bring er another report er to the highways and transportation committee in response to this petition er as as indeed is set out in paragraph ten B and if Mr wished that to be brought forward through to council then that will be done but I leave to him if he wish to move an amendment to make it quite clear , since er I must say this motion is rather bland .
26 However , he submitted that even if the trial judge had misdirected the jury when he told them that the case against the first appellant depended solely upon what it was proved that he himself had done , that misdirection was to the advantage of the first appellant .
27 They were accordingly satisfied that the trial judge misdirected the jury when he stated that the case against the first appellant depended solely upon what they could find proved that he himself did .
28 This does not mean that he himself thought a trust the ideal way to realize his intentions .
29 Sir Kenelm Digby , whose book of recipes collected from his contemporaries and friends has provided posterity with a graphic record of Stuart cookery , notes that he himself made a fine syllabub with syrup left over from the home-drying of plums ; being " very quick of the fruit and very weak of sugar " this syrup " makes the Syllabub exceeding well tasted " says Sir Kenelm .
30 We have an eye-witness who heard him when he went to preach at Easington colliery to a large congregation of miners and their families , who felt that he himself and the other hearers were electrified .
  Next page