Example sentences of "[vb -s] that he [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 His parents will both cry if he writes that he can not come home .
4 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 .
5 At the point where Theseus finally accepts that he will never see his son again ( ‘ Je ne te verrai plus ! o juste châtiment ! ’ ,
6 His son has gone off to London , and he worries that he may lose touch with him .
7 If he just wants that he can have it .
8 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 .
9 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 .
10 It is , therefore , appropriate for the liquidator , when he thinks that he may be under a duty to try to recover something from some officer or employee of a company , or some other person who is , in some way , concerned with the company 's affairs , to be able to discover , with as little expense as possible and with as much ease as possible , the facts surrounding any such possible claim .
11 But evidence really amounts to no more than expression of the opinion by a particular practitioner of what he thinks that he would have done if he had been paid hypothetically without the benefit of hindsight the position of the defendant , with a little while the evidence of the witness is due , what in the matter of law the solicitor 's duty was in the particular circumstances of the case , I should have thought , being a solicitor the very question which the functions , to decide .
12 He thinks that he can lure me into making a statement that will have him attempting to give a poor man 's reading of ’ Erskine May ’ and saying that he wants me to lay the document before the House .
13 Anyone who thinks that he can improve on the commitment and effort of British Coal managers reveals how little he knows about the coal industry and coal mining .
14 If he thinks that he can come back to the House , whatever the supine press may say , and present it as a triumph for Britain that he has managed to prevent those provisions from being applied in this country , although they are being applied everywhere else , he shows that the Government are not only economically bankrupt but bankrupt of values .
15 I do not know whether he does not understand the measure or whether he thinks that he can discredit the idea by associating it with the poll tax .
16 This gentleman thinks that he can bring up a child
17 he thinks that he can buy I could buy this standing space because I 'm a businessman and I 've got lots of money .
18 The tenant covenants that he will do or refrain from doing certain things which undoubtedly touch and concern the land .
19 The laird of Balfunning wanted a tide waiter 's place for his son , but Buchanan was clearly not prepared to settle for promises , for he ‘ insists that he may see his son 's commision before the election ’ .
20 Robson insists that he will not play for a draw .
21 In addition , he insists that he should listen to clerical advice , even though the new ruler was as yet a pagan , as his father had been .
22 He understands that he can only go to the heads on a falling tide . "
23 ‘ Horemheb understands that he can not touch you — yet .
24 But his comments sparked an angry response from Torquay chairman Mike Bateson , who said afterwards : ‘ His ( Kelly 's ) remarks that he could watch four games a week and see 200 such tackles was the most ludicrous statement I have ever heard .
25 When my Cid saw that they who eat his bread were returned , he went down from the tower , and received them right well , and praised them for what they had done like good knights : howbeit he was full sorrowful for Alvar Salvadores that he should be in the hands of the Moors , but he trusted in God that he should deliver him on the morrow .
26 Having used most of it up taking shots of you , he realises that when anything happens that he should cover he 's going to look very foolish with no film in his great big camera . ’
27 Later , apparently unseen by others , she dances through the betrothal party at which he is confronted by Madge , the Witch , who foretells that he will never marry .
28 He says that he 'll be able to have that one it work and I 'll work for him tomorrow .
29 Fossils fascinate him too , and he says that he might even look to a career in palaeontology .
30 Beowulf says that he would like to sail for Hrothgar 's land and take up the fight against the monster .
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