Example sentences of "[vb -s] that [pers pn] [vb mod] " in BNC.

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1 He adds that he would be surprised if industry , already hit by the recession , ‘ was not anxious about the prospect of accounting changes , the general effect of which will reduce the opportunities for carrying costs below the line ’ .
2 There is no longer any dichotomy of truth and lies that he can manipulate from midway between the audience and the other characters .
3 The argument from analogy supposes that you can construct from your own case a concept of pains which can be felt by others rather than by you .
4 Then we decided during one of my hospital visits that we should try again .
5 A later law dealing with landless newcomers , specifies that they should receive half the property , and not two-thirds .
6 ‘ She writes that she will never show the photograph to anybody .
7 His parents will both cry if he writes that he can not come home .
8 There 's a little old rhyme about sowing crops which accepts that you ca n't expect the maximum potential from a crop every time — you 've got to allow something for the other occupants of the land and it goes :
9 There are even rare cases when the employer accepts that you might be innocent and yet is entitled to dismiss you .
10 This is because the law accepts that it may not always be in the best interests of a patient to receive further invasive , or aggressive , treatment .
11 Eugene Steuerle of the Urban Institute , who also favours increasing the exemption , accepts that it might take many years to reverse the effects of its shrinkage .
12 He accepts that he can not make a categorical statement about innocence or guilt , but he feels that his constituent has not been given a fair hearing .
13 At the point where Theseus finally accepts that he will never see his son again ( ‘ Je ne te verrai plus ! o juste châtiment ! ’ ,
14 When you comfort her , she clings to you , because she worries that you will disappear again .
15 His son has gone off to London , and he worries that he may lose touch with him .
16 We obviously ca n't afford to spend all our time to put demo bands in , but we do offer special rates for demo bands that they can afford . ’
17 If he just wants that he can have it .
18 The screen shivered and cleared as he cut off , which allowed me to offer him a few choice epithets that he could n't hear .
19 He concludes that they could not , on the basis of two connected arguments .
20 Upon reviewing all the comment 's replies to A , it concludes that it can get at least 10 ( hypothetical ) ‘ points ’ with A .
21 The service power to view panelled view was that the three point nine million pounds was effectively a minimum exceptionable level and it was within this figure they required the one point six million on minor works and footways to be increased to two million pounds for nineteen ninety three ninety four , section three concludes that it will not be appropriate to attempt to finance these extra loan charges on a continuing basis on the fixed revenue budget , as they would each year and on an accum accumulative basis consume some three hundred and fifty thousand pounds .
22 The recent Institute of Economic Affairs publication , A Discredited Tax — the Capital Gain Tax Problem and its Solution , examines the present UK taxation of capital gains ( TCG ) and concludes that it should be repealed or at least levied at greatly reduced rates .
23 Can I take you back to the er the Good Report er about Trust Law , i it the report er concludes that it should be retained as the framework for er occupation of pension schemes .
24 Left alone , Edmund is rather amused by the situation : Rather like Iago , in a soliloquy at a similar stage of the action ( Othello , V.i.11–22 ) , Edmund concludes that he will win anyway .
25 First , he holds that we should recognize that valuable things may be organic unities ; second , he recommends a method of isolation .
26 Lyotard holds that we can best understand the nature of the unconscious through examining precisely how it is not structured like a language , that the most important criterion of demarcation of the unconscious from the ego lies in the ways that the former does not operate as does language .
27 She thinks that we may have sent her too many book tokens , ‘ but ca n't check .
28 ‘ If you mean the Prince thinks that we 'd be better off if the clock were set back a couple of hundred years , ’ Caroline said , ‘ the answer 's yes . ’
29 The right hon. Member for Shoreham ( Sir R. Luce ) thinks that we should change the standard spending assessments .
30 He thinks that we will never deal intelligently with these questions if we confuse them with questions about what is good in itself .
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