Example sentences of "[verb] that he have [verb] [prep] " in BNC.

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1 Mars-Jones J in Palacath Ltd v Flanagan [ 1985 ] 2 All ER 161 decided that a surveyor was not immune without specifically denying that he had acted as a quasi-arbitrator .
2 The doubts about Mr Lamont 's survival grew after it was disclosed that he had withdrawn from the panel on BBC TV 's Question Time programme tomorrow , with Mr Clarke replacing him .
3 ‘ He 's a lad with bags of confidence and was quick to let me know that he 'd scored on his debut and I had n't .
4 And Eliot lets us know that he had to argue with Pound , who wanted in some items that Eliot excluded , and wanted out some items on which Eliot insisted .
5 They did not know that he had worked as a locum at Bolton Royal Infirmary and the doctor did not tell the infirmary that he was HIV positive before or after he was employed for six shifts in the casualty department .
6 He might as well have descended on the Palace , announcing that he had come for a stay .
7 The accused maintained that he had gone to her home to ask if she had received a letter of apology from him for his earlier crime .
8 It was claimed that he had confessed to spying for the US Central Intelligence Agency , but the US authorities had always denied that he had any official connections .
9 Clearly , there is an element of political value judgment in such decisions : in 1921 a judge held that reasonable citizens would not think less of a trade unionist if it were claimed that he had worked during a strike : some juries might reach a different decision today .
10 Eliot mentioned that he had written to Belgion , gently protesting against the intemperate way in which this comment had been conveyed .
11 Some papers later reported that he had stopped for tea at the Ritz but this unlikely frivolity was angrily and officially denied .
12 I went to see Eric to tell him about this conversation and found that he had come to the same conclusion .
13 More than one witness recalled that it gained height steadily after being launched on several occasions in 1848 , and Stringfellow himself certainly considered that he had demonstrated with it the possibility of powered flight .
14 Roby 's fears of what that might mean weighed against the fact that John Simpson , the BBC diplomatic correspondent , reported that he had spoken to senior Iranian politicians and was convinced that the British hostages were alive .
15 ( Rebel sources reported that he had fled to the southern port of Kismayu , with the aim of entering Kenya , which had promised him safe conduct .
16 Citing Paul Wilkinson , professor of international relations at St Andrew 's University and head of the Research Foundation for the Study of Terrorism , as a leading proponent of this view , she reported that he had known about the timer match for almost a year .
17 The later wildness and eccentricity of his style were completely out of character with his conventional , moral and industrious way of life ; his obituary reported that he had died from overwork .
18 However suspicious he was , he surely realised that he had agreed to this visit ?
19 The anthropologist 's appetite for information and his curiosity are boundless , and he is naturally particularly attracted by those avenues of inquiry where the answers come hard , suggesting that he has touched on a sensitive and hence significant vein .
20 Before he expected , his feet met blocks of stone , and he realised that he had come to the edge of the great sprawling tip of the infill .
21 When nothing happened , and he realised that he had come to a place without facilities , he retired for another consultation .
22 Instantly , fear welled up in him again , and he realised that he had walked into a trap .
23 Now I 'm against that and I 'm therefore against I regret to say what the Noble Lord , Lord said , and I 'm extremely sorry to see that he has moved on this particular matter er because th there is no case , that has been really made out for this .
24 On Dec. 31 Salim announced that he had met with various Somali representatives in Addis Ababa , Djibouti and Nairobi .
25 He announced that he had resigned in accordance with a recent party proposal providing for an income and wealth ceiling for those holding leadership posts .
26 Albert Speer , the ambitious , calculating , and rational power technician who had climbed to the top of the ladder , and who distanced himself most clearly from Hitler at Nuremberg and in his memoirs , admitted that he had seen in the Führer something approaching ‘ a hero of an ancient saga ’ and , after the victory in France , as ‘ one of the greatest figures in German history ’ .
27 He admitted that he had learnt of the Iran-contra operation in mid-1986 and had passed the information to his superiors , including Clair C. George , the agency 's deputy director for covert operations and a subordinate to Gates .
28 Richard admitted that he had listened to the advice of people who were deliberately trying to sow dissension between them .
29 On 5 August 1974 , the President admitted that he had known of the Watergate break-in in June 1972 , and confessed to his part in the subsequent cover-up .
30 Mr Engholm admitted that he had lied in 1987 to a committee investigating a dirty-tricks campaign mounted against him by the Christian Democrats .
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