Example sentences of "[adv] that he [vb past] [conj] " in BNC.

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1 He lived the part of a blind man so much so that he tripped and fell after leaving the set and damaged the cornea of his eye because he had trained himself not to blink !
2 Whitlock kicked out at the man , catching him on the leg so that he overbalanced and fell against the wall .
3 She twined her arms so tightly round his neck that he almost choked , pulling him down so that he overbalanced and fell on top of her .
4 Not that he believed that the firing he had heard had been caused by the French .
5 Well probably , not that he went and it would of we subsequently we apply much to the U K erm
6 An ANC official said later that he hoped that a transitional executive council would be in place by March or April 1993 to prepare for elections .
7 But it was n't until Ellen came to pick him up that he discovered that she had already bought everything for a picnic lunch .
8 It was only on glancing again at his watch at three minutes to one and wondering what time the Substitute would turn up that he realized that the Substitute was the reason why .
9 Although he was still away fairly often , visiting the mills in Leeds and Bradford which provided the bulk of his income , he was more relaxed now that he felt that he was mastering the intricacies of the various businesses which had been allowed to slip into low productivity during his father 's ill-health .
10 Hennessy moved in closer now that he knew that he was n't placing communication at risk .
11 He rushed along London Street and Bridge Road so fast that he puffed and staggered the last few yards to the cottage where he lived with his parents and two younger brothers .
12 ‘ It was then that he realised that the whole island was alive .
13 It was only then that he realised that he simply had n't been driving it fast enough .
14 To his surprise , she did not reply but looked at him so vaguely that he inferred that she had not heard him .
15 The respondent was alleged to have grappled the father of the young man around the neck and pushed him away so violently that he fell and cut his head above the right eye .
16 It was to be alleged that the respondent had pushed the father of the two brothers so violently that he fell and cut his head and that he dragged or threw their sister in such a way as to cause bruising to her arm and neck .
17 The allegation had been spoken so quietly that he doubted whether she had in fact heard it .
18 The right hon. Gentleman will be aware that the case for pardoning Derek Bentley was supported by his trial jury , which recommended mercy in 1952 ; by the Lord Chief Justice of the day ; by the trial judge , who said subsequently that he believed that Bentley would not hang ; a subsequent Lord Chancellor , Lord Hailsham ; by many members of another place ; by many right hon. and hon. Members of this House — nearly one third of whom signed a recent early-day motion ; and by millions of our fellow citizens .
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