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

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1 The promise and the fulfilment , let me just give you a couple of verses there in John fourteen , John make er , Jesus he makes this statement to his disciples , in John fourteen , in verses sixteen and seventeen , and I will ask the Father and he will give you another helper , another word for the Holy Spirit , that he may be with you forever .
2 It is , therefore , appropriate for the liquidator , when he thinks that he may be under a duty to try to recover something from some officer or employee of a company , or some other person who is , in some way , concerned with the company 's affairs , to be able to discover , with as little expense as possible and with as much ease as possible , the facts surrounding any such possible claim .
3 He must have a full knowledge of the local Bye-laws , local Acts of Parliament and Standing Orders of the council , so that he may be in a position at any time to advise the local authority on their functions and powers .
4 Word is out that he may be in the same class as Chris Armstrong , sold to Palace for £1m after just a handful of games .
5 If anything , he 'll need calming down — and the best way Taylor could achieve that would be to tell him , whatever happens against Turkey tonight , that he 'll be in the team for the next five games at least .
6 Hilary , who admits she 's ‘ had a few chats ’ with Michelle about their pregnancies , thinks Simon 's biggest worry is that he 'll be in the middle of presenting his show when she goes into labour .
7 The agency , however , has promised that he 'll be in touch .
8 This fellow , who must be the only , or almost the only , surviving person outside Japan who has been the target of a nuclear bomb , and who knows what it 's like for real ( as opposed to the criminally bone-headed fantasising about nuclear war indulged in by our sillier soldiers and politicians ) , was not only matter-of-fact about it all , as though it was the sort of thing that might have happened to anyone , but he actually admitted that he had never given a thought to the possibility that he might be at risk as a result of the radiation he undoubtedly suffered at the time until recent weeks when various busybodies brought the matter to his attention .
9 ‘ Good luck , ’ he murmured , and then suggested that he might be of further help to her .
10 IN THE 1920s when John was regularly crossing the world to finalize his deals , he always arranged that every trip ended in New York so that he might be with his darling Mary Read .
11 At the back of her mind was the thought that he might be with someone else .
12 And Cantona himself suggested in a French newspaper interview that he might be on the look-out for a new challenge after just a few months at any club .
13 It was one thing to suspect that he might be on a terrorist hit list , and quite another to realize that Asmar 's killers knew where he was .
14 This can have a rather unsettling effect over a long period — the family man can not promise to take his children to the seaside or his wife out to dinner more than a week ahead without the chance that he might be in India , California or Scotland at the time he promised .
15 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 .
16 She glared at him , hating the treacherous little ache in her heart at the thought that he might be in league with Harry Martin .
17 It might be argued that in such situations it is the only course of action open to a man and that he would be at fault if he acted differently .
18 Police were tipped off that he would be at the wedding in Bradford .
19 As soon as I got home I rang Graham Fearnley and established that he would be at the Crystal International Tournament on Thursday , its opening day , and we arranged to meet after Jack Mason had played .
20 Always with resignation and with grief but buffered by the knowledge that he would no longer be in pain and confusion , by the fact that he 'd had a long and lively life — that he would be at peace at last .
21 He sat there until his eyelids began to droop , then phoned the switchboard and told them that he would be at his hotel .
22 At Bethel , the place of the vision of the stairway to heaven , God promised him that he would be with him , that he would keep him wherever he went , that he would bring him back to the Land , and would not leave him .
23 The King had been so glum on his arrival and then , suddenly , almost out of character even for him , his mood had changed to one of enjoyment , drinking deeply , boasting that he would be with the Queen before the night was out , then off riding into that terrible storm to his death on the top of Kinghorn Cliff .
24 And as a matter of fact , as a matter of fact , the Germans th th th had thought that he would be of value to them at a later stage , because he was er he was shipped to Germany , and er er I understand that he died in Germany er at the latter end of er of of er of the of the war , the Second World War .
25 Dr Paisley could not foresee that he would be in gaol during the throes of a general election .
26 Leslie reckoned that he would be in no more danger in the S.A.S. than in the Parachute Regiment : or so he persuaded himself .
27 Nevertheless , she was both surprised and touched when , with an obvious effort , he said that he would be in London at the weekend and wondered if he might have the pleasure of taking her out to lunch .
28 So , one would have thought that he would be in his element in the 19 Waltzes of Chopin .
29 Although they never said it , he knew their bitterness stemmed from the fact that he would be in charge of the operation .
30 He noted with satisfaction that he would be in mid-Atlantic on his sixtieth birthday:an apt metaphor , perhaps , for his own condition .
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