Example sentences of "that [pron] [vb past] he " in BNC.

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1 With a mental shrug she tried to ensure she kept up , knowing that nothing irritated him more than to be kept waiting even a second when he was in this mood .
2 He had no really bad faults but you had to be careful that nothing startled him , such as a bird suddenly rising , and on one occasion he did bolt .
3 He confessed that everyone trusted him now , as they had done in the old days .
4 It was n't until he asked if he could take some off that I realised he had got himself well wrapped up — with 24 articles of clothing , ’ said Taylor .
5 I was so surprised that I followed him without a word .
6 I loved Tom McMahon too — you must n't be thinking I did n't , that I cheated him , but it was a different sort of love .
7 I delivered what was to be my longest speech of the evening , saying that I gathered he was keen to talk about his role , to talk about Gary .
8 That was the point that I heard him make in Brighton .
9 ‘ I was so terrified that I fought him all the way .
10 These recent watercolours , larger , bolder and stronger than his earlier work , pleased me so much when first I saw them that I offered him an exhibition at Abbot Hall .
11 Blair worked on the islands for a number of years and I confess that I envied him .
12 Then I saw Mr Shepherd — and he looked so — so strange that I kissed him too . ’
13 ‘ It was at that place I told you about that I knew him , ’ he said to Lili .
14 I always felt that Basil was a very shy , warm hearted man with a special sort of honesty and I am glad that I knew him .
15 I could see , as he sang , the years drop away — so that I knew him : the young and hopeful singer , all the best to come , a bottle no more than something to be cracked among friends .
16 ‘ I would have thought that I knew him fairly well , but in writing the lyrics I found depths I had never contemplated . ’
17 I would have to bite back my angry words — that better men than he had driven the jeep but that I knew he would share their fate .
18 Not that I bore him any personal ill-will ; it was simply that I knew he could n't stay .
19 And do lots of things that I knew he was capable of doing .
20 Although Korda was now more of a financier than an active producer , it was his suggestion that led Graham Greene to visit Austria to see if he could find the background in the four-power occupation of Vienna which would inspire him to extend his one-line story : ‘ I had paid my last farewell to Harry less than a week ago , when his coffin was lowered in the frozen February ground , so that it was with incredulity that I saw him pass by , without a sign of recognition , among the host of strangers in the Strand . ’
21 He started wearing women 's clothes , he started putting on make-up and on the last couple of times that I saw him he was pretty strange .
22 And , though I hate to admit it , the fact that I saw him differently was Sophie 's doing .
23 Even so … there is reason to say that I saw him , even though I then neither made , nor could have made any judgement at all , either right or wrong , about who or what it was that I saw .
24 I had tried hard to destroy all feelings of love for him , but now that I saw him again , I could not stop myself loving him .
25 Just that I saw him on a train to London a couple of weeks ago .
26 Beesley 's case offered corroboration : the hero of the Titanic was a blanket-forger and transvestite imposter ; how just and appropriate , therefore , that I fed him false cricket scores .
27 the chap that I sent he thought he knew what a confined space was .
28 But I feel I should return just a moment to the matter of my father ; for it strikes me I may have given the impression earlier that I treated him rather bluntly over his declining abilities .
29 I did n't want John thinking that I said he would get her one .
30 You must have realised that I resented him . ’
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