Example sentences of "[pers pn] [verb] that it [verb] [prep] " in BNC.

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1 No , I mean that it comes as a surprise when you first experience it , and then after that you ca n't change the course of events .
2 and I found D Y by D X and I found that it came to erm X squared .
3 I stipulated that it had to be different from mine .
4 Yeah perhaps , I , I know that it applies to some people .
5 I assume that it matters to your investigation ? ’
6 I assume that it contains among other things the letters I have sent to him .
7 For a purely parochial event , it must have been quite an occasion because I believe that it ran from Wednesday , through to the following Saturday .
8 Frankly , I believe that It begins in an attitude to life which is almost mystical , if not religious , in its orientation and approach .
9 This was , as I have said , not our experience , and I believe that it rests in part on a very general tendency to undervalue the potential of well motivated students in the middle ranges of ability , in part on a rejection of the idea that the study of Language is very wide , and very various , that only some parts of that large landscape are accessible only to the most intellectually gifted .
10 A huge , heavy , panelled oak door faced it , and peering through the windows I saw that it led into the mill kitchen .
11 I think that it is n't a general skill it at needs to be commented on , I think that it needs to commented on I think that it ought to be commented on in the comment box .
12 In a letter to my wife I said that it looked as if my job was to try to give them new faith and hope .
13 The way you say that it sounds like crap , but I guess the essence of it makes sense .
14 Do you feel that it competes with the fireplace as a focal point in the room ?
15 Provided that your material is newsworthy and you ensure that it lands on the right person 's desk at the right time , the chances are that it will be published .
16 She characterizes it as a ‘ micropolitical structure ’ in itself , which ‘ underlies and supports the macropolitical structure ’ ; and she alleges that it lies at a ‘ crucial point ’ ( 1977 : 179 , 191 ) between open , and concealed , political control and resistance .
17 And an achene is a small , single-seeded fruit that does not open , which you might mistake for a nut unless you know that it came from a single carpel . )
18 If you ever try to do a ha a demonstration for anybody erm or a group of people involving a sort of manual skill , you find that it goes to pieces if it 's not a very well rehearsed skill , whereas you find you can actually get very your performance is a lot better when you 've got an audience if you know the skill very well .
19 If you find that it tends to ‘ pull in ’ too much then cast on for two by one rib .
20 Assembling our find on deck we found that it consisted of a case of 10,000 cigarettes and several cases of spirits .
21 It stands alone as a study of infant care practices , but we hope that it contributes to a discussion of those factors which form Bergman 's ‘ critical mass . ’
22 We know that it pays to be informed about the particular problems of getting older , like osteoporosis , the development of brittle bones , that can afflict women past the menopause .
23 I feel that it shows itself in the contrast between the child 's — we 're talking about children for the moment , although obviously there are dyslexic adults — it shows itself in the contrast between the person 's ability to express him or herself in words and their ability to put it down on paper and to read it off paper , and it 's this contrast which often arouses one 's suspicions that there might be some problem and , having gone into it a little , we find that it stems from a failure of the sensory motor system — the brain is n't processing the information it 's receiving through the ear and eye .
24 It is an important Bill even if , as it stands , we believe that it needs to be improved .
25 This is not to say that it does not cause symptoms ; we think that it does in some people .
26 Both these words were used in medieval times ; and we can understand the word knacker as an equivalent for harness-maker when we learn that it comes from an Icelandic root , knakkr , meaning a saddle .
27 Some ministers perhaps keep it on because they feel that it caters for a section of the adult church with whom they are unwilling to compromise in the sermon .
28 That 's why sometimes they got mad at him because they knew he was talking to them and about them and they knew that it applied to them .
29 But he insists that it follows from it and others of the same kind that knowledge is impossible .
30 When he tried to swallow the lump in his throat he found that it tasted of beck-water .
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