Example sentences of "that [pers pn] [modal v] [noun] " in BNC.
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1 | ‘ I thought we really would make a new start , that I would sort of … make him blossom . ’ |
2 | A myrrour of glasse , that I may prene therin ; |
3 | So that I may wheel and deal . |
4 | . What I 'll do is that I 'll final of action shortly and I 'll tu |
5 | ‘ Do you have a camera , a second-hand , for about £12 , that I can hand-hold outside ? ’ |
6 | ‘ I may have to miss the first game but I 'm hoping to get myself a boot made for my left foot with a steel plate in it to protect the toe so that I can practice as soon as I get to India . ’ |
7 | said all I 'm worried about is did I wash my hair too early for you so she said it 's alright I 've got a spray that I can sort of cos she likes it quite wet when she |
8 | I I I I think that 's one of the options that I could sort of er I could still be the li , cleaner over here . |
9 | For many years , I have wished more than words can say that I could unburden myself , unbutton my secret . |
10 | Over the next few days I was in touch by letter and by phone with Eliot , and finally it was arranged , in a note dated 9 May , that I should lunch with him on Thursday 19 May , which , as he carefully specified , was Ascension Day . |
11 | ‘ I did n't set out to find you — it 's sheer coincidence that I should chance to walk along the same street and into the same pub . |
12 | ‘ I believe that I should soldier on with my policies . |
13 | Outraged by the bloody repression , Dai Qing publicly resigned from the Communist Party and said that she would distance herself from politics to concentrate on her writings . |
14 | No one was within earshot , they were miles from anywhere , it seemed , and even if she jumped in the river and swam for it the chance that she would outmanoeuvre him in the water was slim . |
15 | The marshal 's favoured plan — Susan gathered — was that she should B into Daine 's Dream , as herself but with a few improvements and then rip the sub-universe apart until she found the fugitive and could tase him awake . |
16 | I love the way that she can edge in to a theme with extreme gentleness . |
17 | She has found that she can interest modern teenagers , and develop attitudes of stillness and attentiveness and reflectiveness , through detailed study of certain masterpieces . |
18 | But there , from any notes , she felt that she could piece together what had taken place . |
19 | None the less her experiences with those other professionals led her to believe that she could nut affect the result of their deliberations . |
20 | She squatted down to his level , and he stuck his chin up in the air so that she could rebutton his coat for him . |
21 | When you book your ( Club 19–30 ) Holiday we want you to be so satisfied that you 'll book with us again next year . |
22 | And then you could put arrows round the outside , for comments that you might conversation , erm , conversation A and B , if you 're doing two . |
23 | Big osier ones , flat , that you could crook over your arm or set on the ground . |
24 | Nobody expects me to say that you could gig with either of these amps , do they ? |
25 | Sail area should be such that you can reef at about 20 knots apparent with a crew of two . |
26 | So anyway she had the er settee and brought a friend with her with a well I think it was one of these Range Rovers that you can seat erm , you know , about seven and he dropped the seats down and got the settee in , I do n't know how he managed it . |
27 | Well Cajun stuff and all that I thought , and then there 's them you can do some long kebabs and all that , that 's why if we get one of them charcoal grills that you can pa shoo , shee shoo . |
28 | Again , it 's of paramount importance to keep an overview so that you can gear each aspect towards achieving the objective . |
29 | It is useful to record dialogues , so that you can practice on your own when your language helper is not available . |
30 | Well for my own part I think that one can educate students as far as possible in terms of what appropriate behaviour is , and I think that you can police students with disciplinary measures when it 's absolutely clear that when they know what the inappropriate behaviour is they nevertheless make a choice that they 're going to move beyond those boundaries of appropriateness . |