Example sentences of "that [pers pn] [verb] [conj] he " in BNC.

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1 I could take it and Barry knew that I knew that he knew I could take it .
2 It was then that I realized that he was going to leave me on my own .
3 By that I mean that he considers schematic ways of making measurements , set up in accord with the rules of the theory , and sees if by any ingenious means he can circumvent a restriction like that imposed by equation [ 2 ] .
4 I said well that I said but he 's a lot taller than you Geoff
5 Manchester City ! ’ he said , continuing the chant which was so like those I had heard at Manchester 's Maine Road ground that I marvelled when he said he had never been to England .
6 I replied with caution and a slightly playful evasion that I understood that he would decide that , to which he replied that naturally he would like to take into account any hopes of mine .
7 The writer remarked that he had ‘ never doubted but that he had succeeded in his place by a commission from the Treasury untill of late that I discovered that he only officiated by orders and an interim warrand from the Commissioners of Customs ’ .
8 He wore a rich robe so encrusted with precious metals and stones that I wondered if he could stand up under the weight And his eyes were tiny , wet and somehow avid as he looked me over — wholly ignoring Mala — from head to foot .
9 I have said that I think that he might and they have all said that of course he will not ; he dare not , they say , there is no way that he will put up interest rates this side of the general election .
10 As an inspector , there was one particular PC that I detested because he was a dodger in my opinion and gutless , and when he put reports in , I would repeatedly scrub across it : ‘ No further action ’ .
11 But he is not a keen theatregoer so there is some drama on the box that I enjoy and he does n't , whereas he enjoys the films more .
12 Tommy 's bus was the very first form of public transport that I encountered because he came every Wednesday to the head of the dale to take us to Barnard Castle .
13 He helped her to her feet , anxiously dusting her coat , apologizing , undistressed , so courteous and unconfused that she felt that he had conferred upon her a favour , and to her amazement she heard her own voice answering , with equal , answering ease , assuring him that no , she was not hurt , no , of course it was not his fault , yes , it certainly was the roughest she had ever known it .
14 She was so furious that she forgot that he had first asked for her trust .
15 He was still naked and seemed so relaxed in that state that she wondered if he often wandered around like that .
16 ‘ I love you , Fernando , ’ she breathed so softly that she wondered if he had heard .
17 Then he always made sure that she climaxed before he entered her .
18 what 's happened , but it does say in it that at the beginning that you assume that he is a youth because he 's got , come from university , but when he 's in the graveyard the fellow , it , it comes out that he 's thirty is n't he ?
19 Every night Tip O'Neill drops by his bed and prays to the same God that you do and he prays for the strength that 's necessary the next day to defeat everything that you believe in .
20 But Walcott does n't give his characters enough to do , or make us warm to Sonny so that we care whether he stays a tourist toy .
21 Byng did not chronicle his earlier travels ; it is from the diary of William Windham [ q.v. ] that we learn that he and Byng toured the midlands and north in 1774 .
22 However , they have underestimated Tamburlaine to the extent that they believe that he will always be a ‘ sturdy scythian thief ’ and that he will never change .
23 Spittals made great play of tapping the microphones and checking that they worked before he introduced the superintendent .
24 Before another reading of this poem on the same visit , he announced that it began where he had begun , and that it ended where he and his wife hoped to end — in the parish church of a Somerset village ; he could see now the pattern of his life completed .
25 Before another reading of this poem on the same visit , he announced that it began where he had begun , and that it ended where he and his wife hoped to end — in the parish church of a Somerset village ; he could see now the pattern of his life completed .
26 and we 've , we 've alleged in the pleading that he made that he would have suffered erm either all or some part of loses would of been avoided , but that depends upon the facts and we 're
27 Mr Jones said : ‘ He did make reference to the letter in the speech that he made and he did make positive noises but whether they will translate into positive actions we 'll have to wait and see . ’
28 At the time he told his son that he thought that he had made a discovery which would prove comparable in importance with those of Newton .
29 It was unlikely that he thought that he would be beaten .
30 The defendant contended that he thought that he was a good enough shot to hit only the bottles .
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