Example sentences of "[vb infin] [that] he [vb mod] [be] " in BNC.

  Next page
No Sentence
1 Little did the bargeman know that he would be instrumental in bringing to justice the most hated woman of her time .
2 Instead of worrying about what fitzAlan might do to her after her last defiant outburst , she could only think that he might be in danger .
3 I mean I do n't think that he should be castigated for not having women just because he has n't got a woman .
4 Out of form over a long period , Lyle did not feel that he would be able to stand the pressure .
5 If you make him feel that he should be getting dressed , and he tries to do so before he is ready , in rehabilitation terms , he will certainly increase his spasticity and make himself even less capable of learning the movements .
6 But do not assume that he will be the only reader .
7 It had been such an unsettled year altogether that he had had no opportunity for connected work of anything other than a temporary kind ; at the beginning of November , faced with the prospect of the British Council tours to France and Italy , he did not believe that he would be able to begin serious composition until the new year .
8 The individual sees himself as contributing to an indefinite process of inquiry by an unlimited community of inquirers , and he may well not believe that he will be around to see inquiry converge on the truth ( 5.589 , 2.652ff . ) .
9 Whatever he is doing , you must remember that he must be positioned correctly at all times to prevent his spasticity from increasing .
10 Bob was always evasive about Tessa , which made Jannie suspect that he might be serious about her .
11 You could see that he would be more than a match for some small female saint with no name .
12 Muddy was one of the nicest people I 've ever met and yet you would n't guess that he would be such a sweet guy .
13 As the Right Honourable Gentleman is aware , our top priority is to get inflation down , and I would also hope that he would be aware that the aim of doing that in the longer term has to be by making the price of money more expensive .
14 Depending on his assessment of the patient , the therapist may judge that he should be encouraged to use open access only as a last resort ; in other cases it has to be accepted that the patient and his relatives may benefit if they can use this facility often .
15 If he does then it will almost certainly mean that he 'll be offered a directorship .
16 However , aggression in the horse does not mean that he will be aggressive or hostile towards us .
17 ‘ My conversation with him this evening made me realise that he can be quite devious , and also that he has a rather cruel sense of humour .
18 Only when he stooped and some lire changed hands did she realise that he must be intending to walk back .
19 But even if the state is driven to an action , if at the same time the citizen is put at a serious disadvantage in the assertion of his legal , in this case of his constitutional , rights , by defence in the suit , justice may require that he should be at liberty to avoid those disadvantages by paying promptly and bringing suit on his side .
20 But even if the state is driven to an action , if at the same time the citizen is put at a serious disadvantage in the assertion of his legal , in this case of his constitutional , rights , by defence in the suit , justice may require that he should be at liberty to avoid those disadvantages by paying promptly and bringing suit on his side .
21 But even if the state is driven to an action , if at the same time the citizen is put at a serious disadvantage in the assertion of his legal , in this case of his constitutional rights , by defence in the suit , justice may require that he should be at liberty to avoid those disadvantages by paying promptly and bringing suit on his side .
22 But even if the state is driven to an action , if at the same time the citizen is put at a serious disadvantage in the assertion of his legal , in this case of his constitutional rights , by defence in the suit , justice may require that he should be at liberty to avoid those disadvantages by paying promptly and bringing suit on his side .
23 Dr Paisley could not foresee that he would be in gaol during the throes of a general election .
24 One person on his own could not constitute a procession , but if a person were to march on his own , having publicised the fact widely in advance , it would seem that he might be said to be organising a procession if , Pied Piper like , he were to draw a crowd of supporters and followers .
25 The gaslight flickered in the alley — and then I could not bear that he should be out of my sight .
26 I said well we had I said I had a bit of a run in with the lady who ran it , I did n't agree that he should be compelled to do singing which she thought he should I said and we had a decided it cos he .
27 His acceptance of the condition was made with an easy mind — he did n't feel that distributing a newspaper , even a banned one , would be considered a particularly heinous offence for a young girl , and anyway he could not imagine that he would be in any danger himself if he admitted knowledge of the basket 's contents .
28 I am sorry for the poor girl if her bridegroom chooses to behave as he did tonight , and , knowing him well , I can not imagine that he will be any better behaved when he is married to her than he was before . ’
29 He does say that he will be Octavius ' tent , and shall be waiting to hear how everything has turned out .
  Next page