Example sentences of "that [pron] [verb] [prep] [be] " in BNC.

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1 The management ref refused to talk all the time and after a while it just got depressing , the fact that nothing seemed to be happening .
2 1991 , 27 , 145 ) that nothing seems to be known about Clara Taylor during the years 1921–26 , when she was headmistress of the Northampton School for Girls .
3 ‘ My friends are concerned that nothing seems to be happening . ’
4 They want to see the elimination of the use of knives in crimes of violence , but their approach is that the law is adequate to deal with the problem and that nothing needs to be changed .
5 It seemed that everyone had to be classified according to height and weight so that they would compete against boys of roughly the same size in the school sports at the end of the year .
6 I think that everyone had to be rescued by a motor boat as we drifted helplessly around , vainly splashing at the water with these pieces of wood .
7 This I now of course understand , that everyone has to be careful of any drug smugglers .
8 Alexander said that everyone wants to be right but no one stops to think whether their idea of right is in fact right .
9 The natural justification of my choice between the fruit would be something like ‘ The peach looked delicious ’ , which conveys the full information that I expected to be responding in accord with ‘ Be aware ’ until the last trace of the flavour faded from my mouth .
10 I do n't rise sooner , because 't is the worst thing in the world for the complexion ; nat that I pretend to be a beau ; but a man must endeavour to look wholesome , lest he make so nauseous a figure in the side-bax , the ladies should be compelled to turn their eyes upon the play .
11 ‘ I have to admit that I prefer to be in charge of any given situation .
12 ‘ I could find nothing that I knew to be untrue .
13 And I found many details that I knew to be true .
14 Not that I mean to be cynical , but I do teach in an inner-city school ( where only Advanced Level pupils have textbooks — and they share — and where practical work involves half-a-dozen to a bunsen ) .
15 Here is a signature that I know to be genuine , on a document guaranteeing his overdraft of over twenty years ago , signed in my presence .
16 This does not mean that I like to be led by the nose , but only that I would appreciate a little extra guidance ’ .
17 ‘ I do n't know that I wish to be tossed anywhere as it happens .
18 That I take to be the situation here .
19 In my third year at Oxford , however , I noticed that I seemed to be getting clumsier , and I fell over once or twice for no apparent reason .
20 Going to another church ( of the Presbyterian Church of England ) my love of God came to be the central factor in my life , and aged almost sixteen I told my headmistress with quiet confidence that I wished to be ordained .
21 As soon as I set foot in there , I knew that I had to be involved somehow .
22 My mental health has deteriorated to such an extent that I had to be admitted to hospital and am currently on sedation .
23 A fierce aunt shocked me by telling me shyness is a form of rudeness and selfishness , and that I had to be the first to talk to two people .
24 In 1980 , coming back from a hospital in the States where I had been told that I ought to have an operation ( interestingly on my throat — it was as though all the tension caused by what I could not say was caught up there ) , I saw that I had to be free of this .
25 ‘ Now Bathsheba , ’ he said , laughing , ‘ you know very well that I had to be very careful , as a single man working for you , a good-looking young woman .
26 I was experiencing what he meant ; a new self-acceptance , a sense that I had to be this mind and this body , its vices and its virtues , and that I had no other chance or choice .
27 Ah but I believed if I 'm going to discuss or argue about anything as regarding that I had to be interested in it .
28 ‘ I knew that I had to be the best at everything if I was to haul my family out of the financial trouble they were in .
29 ‘ The variety of work which included anything from milk quotas to mortgage repossessions , meant that I had to be practical and adapt quickly .
30 ‘ Generally that I had to be convinced any person posed a risk — and to give a warning before I fired . ’
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