Example sentences of "[coord] that i [vb mod] " in BNC.

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1 They ca n't say that I 'm in a druggy haze or that I 'll get out of it .
2 ‘ He thinks I wo n't remember my lines , ’ thought Gabriel , ‘ or that I 'll rush them like I did last time .
3 There was always the fear that a chain would snap or that I would step too near .
4 o o or that I would want the hassle and not get the work .
5 Or that I would have to say oh Simon told me , and I do n't think that is a very good thing to do really .
6 I feel that the doctors might accidentally tear me up , or that I might flap off the bed in a gust of wind and float away .
7 The sorts of experiences that you then get people talking about is really well I 've learnt to stand up for myself for the first time , erm I now know what I want to do , I know who I am , erm projects where I 've been involved , where you get women saying things like well two years ago I would never have dreamt of going and talking to the Council about my house , or my children , or that I ca n't get a job because I ca n't get child care , and I would n't have dreamt of doing that and people who now say well now I can do that , I know that I can go and stand up for myself and stand up for what I think is right , just as well as my husband can .
8 I stammered something about not understanding cricket , totally incredulous that anyone should suppose I did understand it , or that I should regard the English side as ‘ we ’ .
9 People tell me they 'll fade and that I should n't worry about them , or that I should n't bother about things like that when I 've got a baby , but I ca n't help it .
10 Well I have no evidence from either of them , you know , er that er they are slamming the door on my initiative , other than the statement that was issued which if you read it , there 's very little in it that you can object to , or that I could object to , which commits them , the two governments to an initiative , and indeed that 's what er the last statement that Mr Adams and I issued asked them to do , the only er they also in in their statements say that my actions have been both courageous and imaginative
11 ‘ I promise , ’ he told them , ‘ that I shall not fail your trust and that I shall lead the country to free elections .
12 I just want someone to know that this — all this stuff — has been a burden and nothing but a burden from start to finish , and that I feel no twinge of regret at coming out of that place , and that I shall never go back into it , ever , so help me Frederica Potter .
13 If you could tell your clients that they 're on a very sticky wicket here and that I wo n't be the only woman journalist who 's utterly repulsed , you 'll be doing them a service !
14 to be honest because erm it 's and that I wo n't say that there 's a criticism of this particular project which I supported at the time but I think that in future we do need to plan our projects and and there are people in the in the town that are prepared to work , perhaps need a bit of organizing , we need to think about how that might happen , but we must n't first reaction go to professional or semiprofessional help .
15 What is called the ‘ moral sense ’ is on this account being able to recognize that if , even against my present will , I let myself become aware of how someone in trouble feels , I would be moved to help , and that I ought not to close myself to this awareness .
16 By this time I was convinced that nothing could work and that I would have to spend the rest of my life obsessed with food , hating my body , eating every day to the point of pain , and desperately frightened if I could n't find any laxatives or make myself sick .
17 I seriously felt that I had lost my ‘ commercial sense ’ that I had before , and that I would never remember the intricacies of the High Court Rules , how to draft Court Pleadings or even how to write a sensible letter .
18 He asked me why and I said I was reading a book called My Early Life by Winston Churchill and that I would want any son of mine to live that life .
19 I had no doubt that there would be a YS contingent with a red flag and that I would ‘ react physically ’ to any attempt to remove it .
20 This afternoon — I arrived in Salisbury at around three thirty — when I entered my address in her register as ‘ Darlington Hall ’ , I could see her look at me with some trepidation , assuming no doubt that I was some gentleman used to such places as the Ritz or the Dorchester and that I would storm out of her guest house on being shown my room .
21 I replied to his letter to say thanks for believing in me , and that I would do my best not to let him down .
22 I phoned the kennel owner to inform her that British Rail insisted the dog wear a muzzle and that I would pay her back if she 'd buy one .
23 I suddenly felt an immense relief that I only had one more charter to complete for Cutwater , and that I would then be free of these men .
24 My reply was that I doubted if any such plan had a remote chance of success , and that I would want to be assured of the truthfulness and authenticity of the document he was planning to send me .
25 Thus I deceived her into thinking that she had scared me , and that I would take the necessary steps to ward off fatality .
26 ‘ If I knew my future and that I would never be No 1 I think I 'd tell myself to forget it .
27 I remember being terrified of going into Harrods because I thought King Herod lived there , and that I would n't come out in one piece .
28 I was packing my kit when it dawned on me that the squad session would be over before I got there and that I would be concerned mainly with being kitted out as a member of the World Cup squad ’ .
29 That was plainly my bent and that I would do well to follow up this line of art rather than branch out into some other road of work .
30 I said seriously that I quite understood , and that I would n't hold her responsible if nothing happened .
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