Example sentences of "of [v-ing] [that] [pron] [be] [adv] " in BNC.

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1 I do him the credit of suggesting that it was not of his invention .
2 When Modigliani was working , Zbo could not resist peeping through the door once or twice to watch , with the excuse of seeing that everything was all right .
3 I suppose English critics will always work on the old lines , and try to get behind the book to quiz the author … instead of seeing that he is almost irresponsible , that it is the result of haphazard circumstances , and that the writer rubs his eyes and wonders how this and that got into his pages as much as the reviewer does .
4 the difficulty , for the father , of accepting that he was no longer the only decision maker ;
5 He seemed incapable of accepting that she was very lonely .
6 The burden of proving that it was not reasonably practicable would appear to fall on the defendant .
7 This saddles the defendant with the task of proving that it was not practicable that the procession should have been postponed .
8 It is a condition of booking that you are adequately insured on your holiday .
9 It was as if the train journey itself , the old-fashioned intimate compartment in which they had found themselves , the freedom from interruptions and the tyranny of the telephone , the sense of time visibly flying , annihilated under the pounding wheels , not to be accounted for , had released both of them from a carefulness which had become so much a part of living that they were no longer aware of its weight until they let it slip from their shoulders .
10 ‘ In the first place , there is the doctrine , which may now perhaps be regarded as a rule of evidence , that , if a voluntary disposition in favour of the husband is impeached , the burden of establishing that it was not improperly or unfairly procured may be placed upon him by proof of circumstances raising any doubt or suspicion .
11 We did her the favour of pretending that she was not talking about her own lack of brains .
12 Well , yes , it 's very interesting , but I 'm not sure it 's working in the same direction as almost implied by your question of implying that there was almost too much .
13 Well it 's very interesting , but I 'm not sure it 's working in the same direction as almost implied by your question of implying that there was almost too much .
14 Recognise that addictive diseases affects different people in different ways and it is very variable in its intensity but that all share the denial of believing that they are not addicted : the crucial test of addiction is not whether one can stop the use of an addictive substance or behaviour but whether one can happily stay off and not be drawn back to it or to something equally addictive .
15 But by way of indicating that they were not , and could not be , the final truth , he appended a series of objections to his lecture course .
16 In fact , he has continually made a point of recording that he was not a boy from the wrong side of the tracks , as some tried to indicate , but that his mother/grandmother made sure they were well provided for .
17 Now I offer that as a little illustration of the difficulties of saying that there are deep national dispositions between one nation and another , which exist inside in some sort of permanent , rock-like way .
18 This might lead us to conclude that in the case where taxes can not bear the additional charges resulting from depreciation accounting ( which is another way of saying that there is not the political will to impose them ) , in order to retain control of the charge to revenue accounts , the existing system will remain .
19 James 's message had been meant for herself , an oblique way of saying that he was no longer interested .
20 I am afraid that he is getting very near to the Nuremburg defence of saying that he was only obeying orders .
21 They 're sort of saying that you are really testing your
22 The cost of doing that it was too high for him .
23 Further good news is that more and more survivors are regularly meeting together , often to unburden themselves , sometimes to experience at least the psychological satisfaction of knowing that they 're not alone .
24 The utter confidence of the claim incensed her , but then came the pain of knowing that it was all too true .
25 But like all such moments it came to an end , yet not before she had the satisfaction of knowing that she was not the only one affected .
26 In the rest of this chapter we shall drop the assumption that prices are fully flexible and examine the implications of assuming that they are either fixed or at least move only slowly to their equilibrium values .
27 So far , so good , but finding a set of correlations of this sort still says nothing about whether they are necessarily part of the memory formation process unless I can find a way of showing that they are not simply the aftermath of the unpleasant experience of tasting the bitter bead ; that is , I must meet my own third , reductionist criterion .
28 First , Wittgenstein sees this sort of foundationalist as a form of sceptic , who admits the difficulty of showing that we are ever justified in believing that other persons exist .
29 This is not just a matter of showing that you are not stealing or plagiarising other people 's work .
30 Rebecca recovered quickly from the shock of finding that she was not alone .
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