Example sentences of "[verb] that [pron] [vb base] [adv] [pron] " in BNC.

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No Sentence
1 How do you know that you do n't you twenty one who said no ?
2 I realise that I have little I need to hide .
3 And the Americans are saying if you build that we pull out our our , our aid to you .
4 No but I mean let's be fair about these though , be fair to them , and in the erm , to see that they carry out your suggestions or advice is with the area local authorities ,
5 think I mind says that I ask where you going now , going now or , well he 's not been here .
6 We could all have thought of suitable answers to that one , but the rigid framework in which we lived dictated that we button up our lips , bite our tongues and suffer in silence .
7 So far as Richard was concerned if his father was eventually going to insist that he give up his conquests then it was at least possible that he would get better terms if he approached Philip directly and offered to abide by the judgement of the French court .
8 It is well known that we remember best what comes first and what comes last in any period of study or reading .
9 ‘ Any questions you like provided that you know only your daughter can answer them ; the nickname of a childhood friend , for example , or the description of some pet she used to have , anything that she will know and her captors ca n't know .
10 The head of each household , which includes people who are in charge of residential homes , hotels , etc. , is required by law to fill in the questionnaire on behalf of everybody in the household , or at least to ensure that they fill in one for themselves .
11 Managers are not themselves subject to these processes , and so in order to ensure that they carry out their duties efficiently , it is contended that they should be given the incentive of performance-linked pay .
12 That 's what It seems that you do n't It seems to affect the immediate folk and not many other folks nowadays .
13 Erm I mean if you 're if you feel that I do n't I do n't think you 'd have any problem doing this it 's your it 's your it 's the
14 Do n't forget that I know exactly what you 're capable of ! ’
15 The waiters , and particularly the wine waiters , are so beautifully trained that you notice only their discretion and skill — you hardly even see them filling your glass or taking your plate .
16 The loss of the dog means that we cut short our projected trip north , and go down into Dividalen , to the south .
17 No , but it means , it means that we know how we 've got to gear up
18 In a clear allusion to North Korea , it was stated that " political dialogue with other countries in no way means that we give up our principled positions and priorities or forgo the interests of third parties " .
19 As against the chaos , or alternatively the uncritical archaism , of such moral thought , he recommends that we tidy up our ethical language so that the words have a firm utilitarian sense .
20 So a range of behaviour is very important in influencing that we identify where we 're coming from and where the other party 's coming from as well , so that we can maybe begin to mould our behaviour and decide what is appropriate maybe on some occasions towards a passive actually gon na help us achieve for influence .
21 ‘ So I ca n't say that I know where your mother is or why she left . ’
22 The resort itself is a tremendously friendly place , where you really get to feel that you know almost everybody by the end of the first week .
23 By removing these sorts of features — hesitations , false starts , social or regional dialects , idiolect , interference , what people are doing and who they are — sentence linguists would argue that we take away what is incidental and variable in language and leave what is permanent and invariable .
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