Example sentences of "be [art] [noun] that he " in BNC.

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1 It might have been the man that he 'd seen before or it might not ; his face was no more than a characterless oval with a few spare lines drawn on it for features .
2 This had been the story that he 'd used when it had n't seemed so serious , and it was the story that he was sticking with now .
3 The greatest cause of the Prince 's despondency had been the feeling that he served no useful purpose .
4 After all — had n't one of the things that had made it so difficult to get over Tony been the fact that he 'd got off scot-free ?
5 So brief is the note , and couched in such general terms , that it is difficult to base much upon it , but worth noting are the facts that he clearly saw his choice as lying in the normal way between tedris and kaza , which he calls two paths or careers ; that a signal disadvantage of teaching was that it was unremunerative ; and , not least , that , unable to contemplate either alternative , he was able to find a home for his talents and interests in the bureaucracy .
6 For his purposes data sheets are ideal and standard tests laid down by the national standards institutions are the methods that he uses .
7 Staff at the gaol said there had been no indication that he might try to take his life .
8 Rowell , though , is hugely loyal to his Bath players and there has always been a worry that he would promote Bath men without due regard for the balance of the side , as Ron Waldron did with such disastrous results for Wales .
9 Denis 's ‘ Not yet ’ might have been a hint that he was nearing success and did n't want any interruptions
10 Abe was a prominent candidate for the leadership in October 1987 , but eventually withdrew in favour of Noboru Takeshita , in what was widely believed to have been an agreement that he would succeed Takeshita after his two-year term .
11 And if they wanted him to be boring then that would be the performance that he would offer .
12 It could not be the portrait that he had painted .
13 The things that you say would be the things that he would say .
14 The people that you hang around with would be the people that he would hang around with … and so on .
15 Counsel will use deferential language in court , particularly in respect of a decision that he submits was mistaken ; the worse the error , the deeper will be the respect that he expresses for the judges he is criticising .
16 At last he was content with his relationship with one woman ; there seemed to be no others that he chose to flirt with .
17 There can be no doubt that he had an ear for what such people have to say for themselves .
18 There can be no doubt that he was devoted to his father — his first book , published 13 years later , was dedicated ‘ To the memory of my father : Nathan B. Cohen ’ and there are a number of references to him in Leonard 's work .
19 To anyone who knew Lewis in the second half of his life , and remarked his preference for boys ' books such as R. M. Ballantyne or Captain Marryat over the so-called ‘ moderns ’ , there can be no doubt that he was here addressing a warning not just to his brother but to himself .
20 The Emperor accepted the request with good grace and his habitual courtesy , but there can be no doubt that he viewed the events in Spain with alarm .
21 There can be no doubt that he planned on a great scale .
22 Though differences of opinion exist on the rationale behind Darwin 's reforms , there can be no doubt that he radically transformed a weak and backward-looking organisation into an internationally renowned art school .
23 But Aethelred 's consent was being sought from the mid-670s ( CS 43 : S 51 ) and there can be no doubt that he regarded Oshere as his sub-king ( CS 156 : S 1429 ; CS 217 : S 1255 ) .
24 Though not all his points are equally well taken , there can be no doubt that he is right in his basic assertion that the Kanunname is shot through with anachronisms suggesting sixteenth-century alterations and additions and that any provision of it must be treated with reserve and checked against other sources before being accepted as being genuinely of the time of Mehmed II .
25 There could be no doubt that he deserved the credit for the republic 's political consolidation .
26 There can be no doubt that he rewrote it for Ken .
27 ‘ You sell hand-painted tiles , ’ he pronounced , and this time there could be no doubt that he was stating what he knew to be a fact .
28 The other point which is made by the defendant is this , he says that the plaintiffs have been guilty of delaying tactics er during the course of this litigation , the result of which has been that er he has not been able to realize his interest in the partnership premises , also he has not been able to acquire a partnership premises and he he , doctor mentioned to me that to the actual conveyance of the partnership premises he 's , he tells me was only produced I think thirty and er that er it was only then that he realized there might be a chance that he could acquire the premises for himself , but he says that er because of the general , I think the case is , because of the general conduct of the plaintiffs in delaying the trial of the action one way or another , er the practical effect has been that the plaintiffs have had the benefit of use and occupation of the premises at which he erm , a main view , has a lot of that interest and that they are getting benefit of the kind from that occupation and he is not getting any money in res in respect of that , at least nothing like any market rent because it maybe that there is a fairly small er payment being made , but I 'm not too entirely clear whether that is the case or not , but the stock bond is suggesting that the plaintiffs have been obtaining benefit of the use of the premises at his expense and in those circumstances it is unfair er in , in , or otherwise not appropriate that the plaintiffs should be entitled to obtain interest on their bill of costs , in respect essentially of the period of delay , and when I say period of delay included that the period during which the forward of Mr Justice remained erm unprotected .
29 Archbishop Aethelberht is said not to have spared evil kings , and there must be a possibility that he was soon as disenchanted with Aethelred 's faction as he had been with Alhred 's .
30 When , later on , his only son died it was taken to be a sign that he had killed the supposed lover unjustly .
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