Example sentences of "that [letter] had " in BNC.

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1 They said that O had been an alcoholic .
2 Someone said that O had not been seen at his job in the video hire shop for the whole week either .
3 What had happened was that O had been at home , not sleeping , thinking about Boy at six in the morning , and he had called up and said , ‘ Are you watching TV , ’ to which Boy had replied , as the man had heard , ‘ Yes , ’ and then O had told Boy to turn over to the boxing ; he 'd just said , ‘ Get up and change to the third channel .
4 Further study , however , together with research of a parallel nature and an examination of the original membrane indicated that o had been read as a , and t as b , and that the name was de Fortereshaye — of/from the forester 's enclosure ( or holding ) .
5 This shows clearly that t had no effect on the output decisions , a result which is obvious from studying the raw data .
6 On the other hand , there does seem to have been the option for the Court of Appeal to complete its unfinished business and dispose of the arguments that B had put to it in his original appeal .
7 It was found as a fact that B had not been negligent , although the contractors had been .
8 Contrast with this case Hiort v. Bott , where A mistakenly sent an invoice for barley to B ( who had ordered none ) , which stated that B had bought the barley of A through G as broker ; and A also sent B a delivery order which made the barley deliverable to the order of A or of B. G then told B there had been a mistake and got B to endorse the delivery order to himself .
9 Suppose that B had in June accepted S 's repudiation of the contract .
10 A , the landlord , having ( by conduct ) told B , his tenant , ‘ You need not fulfil your contractual duty to repair the premises within six months of the notice I have given you , ’ could not forfeit the lease ( that is , terminate the contract ) on the ground that B had broken his contract .
11 C will not , of course , be liable for any acts that he may have carried out innocently before notification that B had divulged the information in breach of A's confidence .
12 Informed that S had a third fit while we were out .
13 It did not accept that J had a learning difficulty .
14 Her parents had not accepted the grounds of referral to a children 's hearing , that L had been the victim of an offence , and the case had gone before Sheriff Sir Stephen Young at Greenock Sheriff Court .
15 There was little dispute that D had committed the offence of dangerous driving , but did that automatically make him guilty of manslaughter when death resulted ?
16 Note that A had certainly committed no tort to C in leaving the lamps there .
17 The judge obviously thought that A had told a tall story , but he had to accept the facts in the Case Stated by the Crown .
18 It was held that the facts did not show any detinue and it was also said that C had done no wrong by not allowing A to enter and remove them .
19 It was held that C had made out a prima facie case of unlawful interference with its contract with B , notwithstanding that the direct inducement was not , as in Stratford v. Lindley , one step removed from the contract but three steps removed .
20 Now suppose that Y had improved the goods ( just as Harper did in Greenwood v. Bennett ) .
21 Particularly having regard to the weight of the evidence against W , it was extremely important to remind the jury that W had a right to respond as he had done , was not bound to answer questions , and that they should not infer guilt from any failure to respond .
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