Example sentences of "[pers pn] [vb -s] that [prep] the " in BNC.

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1 She adds that in the wake of bombings such as the weekend attack in Warrington , anti Irish sentiment can run high .
2 She concludes that during the 1950s and 1960s the prospect of returning to the labour market gave women an incentive to compress their childbearing , thus shortening intervals between births and accelerating the tempo of fertility .
3 Her eleventh novel , Gwendolen , has just been published and she says that for the first time she is writing for her soul .
4 And she says that at the moment she 's more interested in just having fun than dating .
5 She says that in the future , in addition to her current activities , she wants to learn to read and write and to plant flowers in the garden .
6 She says that she hopes that in the end another by-pass scheme will result from the conference .
7 She suggests that in the 1850s divorce became the ‘ solution ’ to the threat of a Married Women 's Property Act ( not achieved until the last quarter of the nineteenth century ) , which would have threatened ‘ the symbolic economy that depended on and institutionalized ( such ) binary oppositions ’ .
8 Her husband John was made redundant from Parsonage pit in an earlier wave of closures , and she believes that at the age of 41 he will never work again .
9 He insists that at the moment there is no such point of friction within the England camp .
10 He insists that in the last analysis there is a fundamental difference between believing in ahi sā , even though it is not possible to behave non-violently in all life 's circumstances , and believing in hi sā .
11 Yet it thinks that despite the aggressiveness of the programme , ‘ Alpha may be too little , too late . ’
12 Here he writes that with the succession of avant-gardes taking the place of established avant-gardes there is a certain ‘ épuration ’ of poetry in which the latter is ‘ reduced ’ to its own ‘ proper materials ’ .
13 He adds that at the other end of his society 's new building — a pink neo-classical palace — there are men in braces and loud shirts dealing on the Tokyo capital markets as they order pizzas .
14 It emphasises that in the final analysis it is not what the electors , or judges , or a returning officer may say , but what the House itself says , which determines whether a successful candidate may take a seat .
15 It adds that over the period , other areas will expand .
16 He says that below the Forest of Dean lies one of Britains largest natural reservoirs .
17 He says that under the circumstances he did the right thing .
18 He says that at the beginning of the relationship he wrestled with himself , knowing that he should back off from Mandy .
19 In an interview with La Stampa yesterday , Ing C Olivetti & Co SpA chief Carlo De Benedetti condemned the pervasive system of political corruption , which he says obligated Olivetti to pay bribes or lose contracts , as ‘ having reduced Italy to a state worse than the Third World ’ : he says that at the last shareholders meeting earlier this year , he had to deny any bribery because he could n't preview information to the shareholders that was intended for the legal authorities ; he says that facing the judges , he felt liberated from a weight — ‘ then I felt a sense of justice — it pleased me to be there , ’ noting that when the company decided that the demands of the postal service for slush funds became too extreme and Olivetti stopped paying , ‘ we did n't sell another machine to the Post — we had arrived at the absurd point where , if we did n't pay , we did n't work and the moment we quit paying , we did n't work any more ’ .
20 He says that at the end of the Laws of Moses one finds the following words : " Moses , having heard the words of God , transmitted them to the Jews . "
21 In the last chapter , in prison , he says that without the crime he would not have found within himself such questions , desires , feelings , needs , strivings , and development . ’
22 He says that in the case of a face one has recognised , talk of ‘ separating ’ the familiarity from the impression of the face does not have any clear sense for him .
23 The witness , John Hostiar , Bailiff of Halling , testified to the old established customs of Halling and the evidence of the witness is recorded as follows : " Being asked how many plough teams of land in the Manor of Halling , he says that in the Manor of Halling with its Pertinencies , vis .
24 He says that in the worst scenario cuts of around 2 per cent would be made , that could mean job losses .
25 He says that in the end it looks as though the TI offer may be taken up .
26 He says that before the election the message was that the recession is almost over .
27 It says that in the fourth quarter of 1991 , there was a threefold increase in the number of stolen cars in the second hand market compared with a year earlier .
28 It says that in the book thing , there 's no bunkers .
29 It says that in the light of the observation it is now reviewing the commercial .
30 In The Form he comments that in the first two degrees it is possible to say " I languysch for lufe " or " Me langes in lufe " ( 106.53 – 4 ) but in the third degree all is comfort and joy .
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