Example sentences of "think [pron] [vb mod] [verb] that [pers pn] " in BNC.

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1 I do n't think I can accept that it 's targeted towards industrial estates , it does not preclude office style campus development being included within it .
2 ‘ I 've had a few more ideas … well , I 've thought about … areas I did n't think I could use that I now think I can , and I want to develop that stuff , and — ’
3 I do n't think you 'll like that it 's a bit spicy .
4 I do n't think you could assume that they evaporated .
5 Jonathan , Jonathan , dad wants to watch the news in a minute please , so hurry up and change it over You 'd think they 'd save that You do n't know , I would n't be surprised you will well that 's marvellous is n't it ?
6 I thought to myself when it was erm , advertised on television , I thought I 'll tape that I bet I know well you 'll be interested in that .
7 I thought she 'd argue that she might as well go somewhere she 'd always wanted to visit . ’
8 He thought he could remember that he and Peter had fastened their rope to a spur or spike of rock and accordingly it was for such a feature that he searched .
9 ‘ Do you think he 'll mind that it is a rather controversial book ? ’
10 His part in her life was over , but I do n't think he could accept that it was .
11 However , a year or more later I got a note from Colonel Leslie Glass saying that in a report received from an officer dropped behind the Japanese lines there occurred the statement , ‘ ’ I think I ought to add that I owe my life to a little booklet entitled Rubbing Along in Burmese . ’
12 Well , I think I would emphasise that it is this particular kind of detective story that I find interesting .
13 I switched increasingly to erm political history , then I moved from economic and political history to social history , to some extent linking the two , and increasingly over the last ten years , partly through the work that I 've done on the history of broadcasting , and on twentieth century history , I think I would say that I would now be a cultural historian .
14 Erm , well I think I can reassure that it is the latter .
15 I come now to the Roll of Honour ; and I think I can say that we can boast as remarkable a list of names as any school in the country .
16 But I think I can say that we have never betrayed the trust that you have reposed in us …
17 Those were the choices , and if we dissect the Labour budget I think you 'll see that we were quite proper in deciding that for all its faults , and I mean this is not a budget that any of us in that chamber , you see , certainly no Liberal Democrat , wanted to even put forward at all .
18 P.S. I really hate to mention this , but if you take a look around you , I think you 'll notice that you 've blown your four-set clause .
19 ‘ I think you 'll find that it 's a legal requirement in Scotland that a child be provided with an education . ’
20 ‘ I think you 'll find that I finish what I start .
21 I think you 'll find that I have , tell you the truth I think you 'll find that I have
22 I think you 'll find that I have , tell you the truth I think you 'll find that I have
23 I think you would agree that it would invidious to single out any one person to thank .
24 If you have a more considerate attitude one where you 're going to sort of give way to people , show a little bit more consideration to other road users , I think you 'd find that it 's gon na it pays off .
25 Conference , I think you can see that we in Grimsby , have done a little bit , we would like to do more , we support the composite , and we support the lady speakers that 've come up here today .
26 ‘ I can not say precisely how long the blade was , but I think you will agree that it is legitimate to deduce its length , from a progressive diminution in the width of the wound .
27 ‘ If you study the answers I have given I think you will find that they are very clear , ’ Di Leonardo returned .
28 ‘ If you study the answers the Deputy Public Prosecutor has given , I think you will find that they are very clear , ’ he told them .
29 I think you will find that it owes it resiliency not to its form of organisation or administrative skills , but to the power of what we call beliefs and the appeal these beliefs have for its people . ’
30 erm , where I set out my interpretation of what that means , and I do n't think it 's very helpful to read that out to you , but I think you will find that it 's er erm a very broad er description of what the new settlement should be seeking to achieve , now Mr erm I think has misunderstood our position on this question of erm the appropriate size for the new settlement , and I think if I 'm correct he suggested that we were promoting a a size of fourteen hundred , the point I think I would make is that the larger the new settlement erm the greater the range and the quality of services and facilities that can be provided , and I think you have to distinguish between what developers say they are prepared to provide , on the one hand in a new settlement , whatever the size , the quality of the retail or recreational social facility that occupies that physical provision , and also its long term viability , and I would suggest that a larger new settlement of the size that we are suggesting , is much more likely to er attract a range of quality providers of services and facilities than a smaller new settlement , and also Mr Grantham er raised the issue of the question of the development program , and what might be expected in terms of services and erm during the development program , and of course I think that would be a matter for any specific proposal , or a ma a matter of discussion between the local planning authority concerned and the developer , and I would expect it to be something erm that was included within a section one O six agreement .
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