Example sentences of "[verb] that [noun] [modal v] [verb] [pers pn] " in BNC.

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1 I 'm praying that God will give me the strength to put up with this chap , spouting his everlasting Socialist claptrap . ’
2 ‘ How do you know that Artai will let me go ? ’
3 She did n't doubt that Travis would follow her as soon as he could , but her hope was to reach a village before he reached her .
4 Detectives also stressed that Lisa could contact them in confidence , without her whereabouts being passed on , if she wished .
5 ‘ No 1 ’ was small , but ‘ Carlisle ’ , built in 1865 , was a largish engine with tender and we soon got to know that Whitaker would let us onto the footplate .
6 It has been claimed that binoculars will show it , but again I must admit failure .
7 Handing out free pitch repairers might help a bit , but it does n't guarantee that people will use them .
8 When you are under pressure , do you really trust that God will uphold you ?
9 Well people do n't understand the system and they do n't think that things will affect them .
10 ‘ Do you think that gentleman will meet her ? ’
11 Because they have been seeded they will avoid any decent sides , so I do nt think that Honved will beat them .
12 As I shall illustrate later , that cost could not be met , and I do not think that Labour would do it .
13 She could not really think that Havvie would marry her , once Sally-Anne jilted him — which she must , for in the face of that letter could she believe a single word he had said , or written , to her ?
14 Only two of the sixteen believers in the Bible accounts agreed that spirits could visit us during dreams although it is crucial to the sense of these accounts that God did make Himself known to individuals during dreams , and actually visited them in their dreams .
15 A few nurses also commented that patients would wear them when the ulcer was healed , were too old and too frail to get the hosiery on , refused to wear it or could not tolerate it .
16 We might have guessed that Olson would do it , if any one could . …
17 My sister ate , but I refused , not out of sacrifice nor because I was resisting temptation ( I firmly believed that meat would make me ill , as my mother said ) , but because I knew — though this formulation is the adult 's rather than the ten-year old 's — that the price of the meal was condemnation of my mother 's oddness , and I was n't having that .
18 She had seen this money before , of course , and still had a little collection of it that she had made as a child , yet it was disconcerting to reflect that Johnny would use it as part of his everyday life .
19 you know qualifications which says that graduates can take it in two years .
20 ‘ Well , I hope that sentence will deter you from any more writing on walls ’
21 Better , fit a true mains switch ( e.g. a cord switch on the primary side of the transformer ) and hope that people will use it instead of the on-off switch on the radio .
22 I hope that God will punish her and … ‘
23 At £12.50 the book is good value , and I hope that chemists will find it useful as an introduction to an area of growing interest and application .
24 Morris clipped the papers together and tossed them across onto Dyson 's desk Dyson had for some reason assumed that Morris would bring them over and stand beside him while he went through them .
25 Or would they silently assume that Franca would do it , or at least arrange it ?
26 I thought , I I well , I do n't envisage anything but I mean I would of thought that kids could fill it in in pencil and then we do the same as we did before a and and that the staff in some way put in their own .
27 But had n't he thought that Spiderglass would save him somehow , plug him in to the endless dance of electrons ?
28 The incident had never been referred to again and Dorothea did not believe that Alida would remember it .
29 The Shah himself could not believe that Hassan would throw him out .
30 I ca n't believe that Chrissie would let you come down here without setting you up better than this . ’
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