Example sentences of "[vb infin] that [pron] [verb] [prep] [art] " in BNC.

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1 He will know that we propose for the sake of speed and practicality to use an existing valuation register , which everyone agrees exists and can be used .
2 If I could know that they fell into the hands of men of learning and curiosity , I should be more easy about them .
3 ‘ But no one can know that who breathes upon the earth . ’
4 If you take part you will be showing solidarity with the poorest nations in the world and letting governments everywhere know that you care about the environment and its undeniable rush to destruction .
5 " I did n't know that you worked in the Biology Department .
6 ‘ I do n't know that I care for the idea .
7 Now a ‘ searching for something ’ or ‘ exploring ’ theme crops up a great deal in drama and there are many teachers who do not recognise that what looks like a tense , exciting , well-focused structure may be no such thing .
8 ‘ I would prefer that you looked at the model first . ’
9 We can explain that they come from an age when theology and the natural sciences were not divorced from one another , when God was held directly responsible for disasters we would now call ‘ natural ’ , and for which we would have scientific explanations to hand that did not mention God at all .
10 For short time , high temperature bakery items at 200°C–220°C , pre-heating at 300°C will ensure that you bake at the correct temperature ( on average 80° C will be lost whilst loading the oven )
11 They did not contest that they participated in the crime ring , but said they had no choice because of pressure from Chinese secret societies .
12 Do you feel that it competes with the fireplace as a focal point in the room ?
13 My Pete said , my Pete said do you mind that we sat at the table , I said yeah , that 's , that 's , that 's a
14 Logically , these latter producers can claim that they contribute to the value of exports , and are therefore entitled to part of the proceeds .
15 I know that Basil saw no simple future at the end of human life because we talked of this last summer ; neither can I. But I do believe that we live in a world whose climate of thought and feeling is created by human beings , many of whom have lived before us , often but little recognised .
16 The Prime Minister answered a question that I put to him earlier this year by referring to the fact that he did not believe that I live in the real world .
17 You will remember that we referred to the essay as a journey .
18 Many right hon. and hon. Members should remember that we started with a tax of only £175 a head .
19 She should remember that she went with a man when she was sixteen .
20 Well I think what you 've got to be careful of and it 's always a difficulty when you 're looking at er benefits and dis-benefits of major road schemes , you 'll see that we go into a tremendous amount of or collect a tremendous amount of information about the different impacts .
21 In that respect , Kundera could have fooled at least one of his readers ; but I do see that it belongs to the point of it all that the uncommon Jaromil should be thought humanly representative .
22 As he neared , he could see that it belonged to a slight female form encased in dark garments , its hair entirely concealed by a white cap .
23 We can see that it coincided with the beginning of that period when society in Britain was to adjust to the absolutely new conditions of the Industrial Revolution , to develop the political thought that signalled the recognition of the need to adjust , and of the institutions to realise the adjustment .
24 This is excess male mortality in humans as a function of age and you can see that it peaks in the mid-twenties and the peak is mainly accounted for by violence and accidents and er things like that , risky behaviour on the part of males and er , as you 'll see , throughout the life span there 's a , there 's a positive percentage excess in male mortality .
25 When it comes to other sensory systems , much of the problem is that we have n't the sort of clear ideas about how they might work that we have about the visual system .
26 ‘ Your mortgage is currently set at £62,500 , Dr Bissett , which is slightly excessive for the salary you command , but I do quite understand that you bought at the top of the market and that interest rates were then not at their present level . ’
27 Indeed , the Teds had appeared on the streets before postwar meat-rationing had been abandoned in Britain — which might suggest that they belonged to the world of postwar austerity , rather than ‘ affluence ’ .
28 And may I suggest that we add to the list , on the computer type it into this particular programme be , it 's called arts list
29 Can I suggest that we talk about the four thousand pound job as a sort of practice profile if we like ?
30 The dramaturgical metaphor would suggest that we look to the audience for the arbitration of the action , and it is perhaps no surprise that the peer group emerged as crucial in this respect .
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