Example sentences of "and [adv] he [verb] that " in BNC.

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1 They called him twice again , and eventually he appeared that evening once it was explained the family was n't used to this sort of treatment ( and once he realised the best salmon stream in the area ran through the estate ) .
2 For some time he struggles to explain this feeling , and eventually he realises that the taste is of course exactly the taste which he enjoyed as a small boy when his Aunt Léonie gave him a madeline dipped in an infusion .
3 She took a step backwards , and suddenly he realized that it had n't been easy for her to come here .
4 And suddenly he saw that it was right .
5 Napoleon III had no intention of allowing this to happen and so he determined that the Court should never be more than a set-piece , a backdrop in front of which the principal figures of the regime could be seen to advantage .
6 He had told Fahfakhs that the young man wanted to marry Claudia , and perhaps he thought that the district officer was laughing at him and treating him with contempt .
7 He says that he did not kill you or your companions because you were unarmed , and anyway he thought that the two he killed intended to use their weapons on you . ’
8 Michael Holly had been a prisoner of the camp for less than one month , and already he believed that he could walk this path with his eyes closed .
9 And yesterday he claimed that former England captain Gary — never even booked in his career — was SOPPY .
10 But it was Eadmer , with his keen eye for significant detail , who noted two points omitted by Osbern : he observed that , as the monks stood round the sufferer , each of the two groups spoke a language which the other could not understand ; and also he remarked that things went more smoothly after this event .
11 He recognizes in Raskolnikov a fellow-struggler , and repeatedly he says that the two of them are birds of a feather ; but he also bids him farewell with a pointed ‘ You to the right and I to the left , or the other way round if you like ’ towards the end of their final meeting , because setting off for America , unlike the North Pole , while it may or may not amount to doing anything ( Crime and Punishment does n't raise the question ) marks a parting of their ways .
12 And now he realizes that his slowness was a pause for savouring , that his silence was full of unfelt feeling .
13 He had not only cuckolded Richard Sharpe , but in the process he had effectively stolen Sharpe 's fortune , and now he discovered that his enemy was mot lost in France , but alive and close to Brussels .
14 In his younger days , he had been a middle-weight Army boxing champion , and now he dreamed that he was in the ring again , with a right-cross from a swarthy , swift-footed opponent smashing into the left-hand side of his jaw .
15 And today he revealed that his wife is now prepared to die for her political convictions .
16 On returning to London he found the entry lock to his block of flats had been changed to keep out squatters from a neighbouring residence , forcing him to wait outside with his suitcases and ‘ coffin ’ for hours , and then he learnt that his house in Worcester had been vandalised by his tenant .
17 And then he feels that perhaps there is n't .
18 And then he knew that he was entitled to hope .
19 A b on on one day he he went earlier and he had his lunch in London , he said , and there was another man on the table and er the both reached for the salt together and upset it and there was apologies and talks and then he discovered that he was the buyer for the London County Council .
20 The Direktor prepared to fight , and then he recalled that brilliant clear voice singing ‘ Einer Wird Kommen ’ at the audition .
21 Cos Michael started it , he said we 're never said anything when we set off in the car , and then he said that he 'd had this fax from me and er Andrew said , well it was n't actually from , er , from me to the , it was fetched up to me and I sent it in the office .
22 This quiet group of people looked so simple and unassuming that at first he could not think what made them interesting to him , and then he realized that they gave every appearance of complete sincerity .
23 Charles baulked slightly at that and then he realized that Bernard actually thought himself Noel Coward .
24 For a moment Robert thought she might have had her feet bound , and then he realized that her problem was simply that her face-mask was now so in line with Islamic law that her field of vision was only about six inches to the left and right of her .
25 For example , they lived very much longer than one would have expected , and Gellmann said well these were strange particles and he invented a new quantum number called a strangeness , and then he assumed that this strangeness quantum number was not quite conserved. erm we have conserved quantum numbers in physics like the charge — you have to conserve the charge , but you do n't quite have to conserve the strangeness .
26 And then he saw that the blackness was moving , and struck at it frantically .
27 Johnson had told Mrs Thrale a little of the four-hundred-year history of Raasay ( or ‘ Raarsa ’ as he calls it ) — and then he divulged that Bonnie Prince Charlie ‘ was hidden in his distress two nights at Raarsa , and the king 's troops burnt the whole country , and killed some of the Cattle ’ .
28 ‘ I have never seen Soho on the screen , ’ wrote Ernest Betts in 1928 and then he added that he had never seen Southend , Birmingham , Chelsea , Bloomsbury , or London suburbia either .
29 And then he added that , of course , writers had nothing better to do most afternoons and since I was now writing a movie for him , he knew how to keep me happy .
30 And then he remembered that it was in exactly this position in exactly this place that he had turned to face Lucy , less than three weeks ago , shouting obscenities at her .
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