Example sentences of "have [vb pp] [conj] that [pers pn] " in BNC.

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1 Gestetner made pre-tax profits of £27.2m last year on sales of £900.3m , but the company has since said that trading in Europe has deteriorated and that it sees only a small profit for the half to end-April.Inchcape is buying the shares from Bermudan-registered Chiltern Capital Ltd , quoted in Australia .
2 While both these objections have truth to them , it is also clear that a range of critical writings which share more preoccupations than differences has emerged and that it can be contrasted to other forms of writing about texts and history .
3 ‘ I hope that the guilty person , whoever he is , has some concept of the suffering and distress which he has caused and that he has a troubled conscience .
4 Tell the officer what has happened and that I 'm here .
5 Thus in ( 140 ) below the lighting of a fire is presented as a condition which would have permitted Pops to be found sooner , but the fire could not be conceived as acting on Pops directly itself and " making him be found " : ( 140 ) A fire would n't have mattered except that it would cause Pops to be found sooner .
6 The wise old heads believe that they would have prevailed and that he would have been forced to wait until the spring .
7 And it had on painted hose of black and white , so cunningly painted that no man who saw them would have thought but that they were grieves and cuishes , unless he had laid his hand upon them ; and they put on it a surcoat of green sendal , having his arms blazoned thereon , and a helmet of parchment , which was cunningly painted that every one might have believed it to be iron ; and his shield was hung round his neck , and they placed the sword Tizona in his hand , and they raised his arm , and fastened it up so subtilly that it was a marvel to see how upright he held the sword .
8 Later that evening she had told him that she came from Newcastle , that her widowed father had remarried and that she and her stepmother could n't get on .
9 He had guessed than that it was his mother — with Senga in tow — heading off to ten o'clock Mass in the nearby church .
10 Then reality returned with a rush as she suddenly realised that the music had stopped and that they were the only couple still left on the floor .
11 Lucy said , looking up at her , and right at that moment Josie would have sworn that some kind of a facade had dropped and that she was returning the gaze of a six year-old .
12 She had to know that he had considered and that he was committed by his reply .
13 He was not particularly pleased with the result , however : when The Family Reunion had been televised two years before , he confessed that it was the first television play he had seen and that he found the medium deficient .
14 In those early months he had wanted her to know the magnitude of what he had done and that he had done it for her .
15 Russell told him what had occurred and that he had not stabbed the man but only punched him .
16 He only knew that the speech had told and that he raised applause , and that he made some jokes which aroused laughter .
17 They slid on to the bench opposite us , making pleasantries about how cold the weather had become and that we should soon be on the road for Somerset .
18 Had she added up the facts wrongly , found him guilty more because it was what she had feared than that it was the truth ?
19 On the question of reconvening the talks , I said consistently in the summer that our talks had concluded and that we would need to re-examine the basis for fresh talks .
20 Sophia , looking up at him , saw that his usual remote look had gone and that he was smiling .
21 They still had more right than she did to own anything her father had left , but she desperately wanted something , something to be able to look at , something to let her know that he really had existed and that he had needed her after all .
22 The most exciting part of all , though , came with the discovery that the puppy was the one Farmer Bolsover had lost and that it was a pedigree sheepdog worth at least a hundred pounds .
23 English observers felt England had improved and that they dominated periods of the game but were let down by defensive errors .
24 You are entitled to be paid for the proportion of the work that you have done and that it was reasonable for you to do .
25 Erm , I think the idea is that a woman is a man 's possession , that she should be subservient , she should do as she 's told and that she has no intelligent to think intelligence to think for herself !
26 Just had a chat with Mickey Stewart and erm , he offered that he thought David Lawrence was a bit tired in the test matches that he 's played and that it 's took it out of him and not , not very quick .
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