Example sentences of "that [pron] [verb] [to-vb] [adv] " in BNC.

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1 He ‘ produced his bell and rang it , stating that that was what he did at the time ’ , but the magistrate told him ‘ that he must not think that everyone had to scamper out of the way upon hearing the sound of his bell ’ .
2 ‘ I told Glentoran manager Rob Strain that I intend to train hard for three weeks and maybe play a couple of reserve games .
3 And now that I come to think back , ’ said Cadfael , shaking his head between doubt and conviction , ‘ that wind that blew in was gone before ever the page settled .
4 Incidentally , now that I come to think further about it , it is not quite true to say there was no dispute as to who were the great butlers .
5 ‘ Next day this camel drops to its knees and this guy gets on and signals that I 've to get on behind him .
6 It was largely due to him that I managed to negotiate successfully with government officials and tribal chiefs during the months that followed .
7 Suppose that I try to act consistently as an egoist , indifferent to any effect on others which is not a means to an effect on myself .
8 The plain truth is that I once twisted my knee after falling down a ridiculously narrow flight of stairs at a crowded party in a terraced house in Highgate , and I found it so comforting and indeed so peculiarly elegant to lean on a good stout walking stick during the weeks that followed this mishap that I continued to do so long after my leg had returned to normal .
9 I did my best , but I suppose it was during that time that I began to drink too much and that finished off my promotion chances .
10 Sine then , whatever the frame , I 've rarely had them off my nose , to the extent that I began to hide defiantly behind them , never fighting being four-eyed except in specs and a ball gown , when I always feel decidedly Everage .
11 It was then that I began to understand how archaeologists could be led into serious error if they decided in advance what they were going to find .
12 It was as I got towards the end that I began to look more towards his future .
13 The shabby room above the tobacconist 's shop where we held our ward meetings became home to me and , in a queer way , made me feel whole and integrated again so that I began to look back on the activities I had taken part in with Sophie as some kind of mental aberration .
14 The one good thing was that I began to get on much better with my children .
15 ‘ I felt that I began to get very complacent in my guitar playing and that 's why we asked Craig to leave .
16 At night I tossed and turned to dreams of such emotional intensity that I went to work as tired as I was the day before .
17 I am still firmly of the belief that I like to walk out of the client 's house with a cheque , because that 's a commitment , and then the next premium comes out of the direct debit .
18 Fearnley was by now talking so quietly that I had to lean close to hear him .
19 Circumstances dictated that I had to wait nearly two years ( how did I survive ? ) .
20 It became clear from talking to parents that I had to see how what they said actually hooked up with their experience , the fine detail of it , and not to assume that I knew exactly what kind of lived experience lay behind a familiar form of words .
21 He was so stiff , so shocked , that I had to go on .
22 So I thanked Mr. Lennis for his frankness , explained that I had to go back to the bank to deal with some work , and departed .
23 It was n't a very full list cos erm er it did n't occur to me until about seven o'clock this evening that I had to go out quite soon and then I just ran around frantically doing things .
24 This was a thing that I had to judge entirely for myself .
25 Because my experience was not of being poor , the discomforts of the poverty that I had to put up with in the rue Victorie did not suggest themselves as unending .
26 ‘ As the full-time mother of pre-school twins , I just thought that I had to put up with Sam 's barely concealed fling with a neighbour , ’ says Tina .
27 The threat of unemployment , even for apparently ‘ qualified ’ people , was such that I had to cast round desperately for a job .
28 Often I felt so full after eating that I had to lie down or drag myself to lectures , feeling as though I 'd just eaten three Christmas dinners .
29 I was surrounded by a crowd of shouting , gesticulating Malts , who pulled at my parachute , lifted my head and drove me so furious that I had to give up the dying idea in order to concentrate completely on kicking every Malt who came within range .
30 There was one that I had to throw away because it was erm
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