Example sentences of "[pron] was [vb pp] that [adj] [noun sg] " in BNC.

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1 Women made up only a minor proportion of the prison population in Geurrero and I was assured that this situation was reflected throughout Mexico .
2 When I wrote a popular book recently , I was advised that each equation I included would halve the sales .
3 I was told that one reason why many Conservative politicians were sympathetic towards our Report was because they did not at first realise that our insistence that all children should speak and write Standard English did not involve any recommendation about RP .
4 I was told that each train which passed us happened to be the one that was taking Tam Mahaddie away to kill the Kaiser and win the war .
5 Does the Secretary of State recall that in answer to an earlier question of mine to his colleague at the Department of Employment , I was told that 25,000 manufacturing jobs had been lost in the past 12 months in Yorkshire and Humberside ?
6 I did not receive a thank you from the owner of these cards nor from the Midland Bank , yet I was told that common practice in Britain is to reward the finder .
7 I was informed that British Steel would be making a decision on the day that it made the decision — I was informed in confidence some days before that it would be making a decision on that day .
8 Although she felt like a little girl who had gone into the wrong party room , she was determined that this woman would not keep her away from her husband .
9 She was advised that formal evidence would have to be called in order for her to form an opinion under section 7(5) of the Act of 1976 as to whether the defendant should be remanded in custody or on bail on the same or more stringent conditions , and that accordingly the hearing would in effect be a trial and would require to be heard before at least two justices .
10 When it was seen that all clan chiefs had taken the oath , Dalrymple was frustrated , but not for long .
11 It was assumed that all learning could be reduced to a series of conditioned reflexes .
12 In the British Army , discipline was centred around self-discipline , and it was assumed that each man had enough self-discipline to carry out an order without being told twice .
13 In 1990 , it was assumed that each assistant would average twenty items a minute ( Cutter and Rowe 1990 ) .
14 The widespread nature of the process took people by surprise ; it was assumed that metropolitan growth was a permanent feature of modern society .
15 It was assumed that any erosion terraces would show as modes in the frequency distribution .
16 The late fifties and early sixties , when I lived in Windsor Great Park , were creative and critical in manner : the established order was questioned ( sometimes cynically ) , but it was assumed that well-directed idealism could change human society .
17 In all six cases it was indicated that sexual intercourse had taken place .
18 It was concluded that bilateral speech representation applied only to strong left handers with left handed relatives .
19 It was concluded that low cost tools have limitations but can provide useful experience to system builders that allows for the critical selection of more advanced software .
20 It was concluded that some platinum enrichment is related to primary magmatic differentiation but that many of the high values , particularly of palladium and gold , are the product of later alteration associated with deformation .
21 In a broad-scale study of cloud forests , it was concluded that random colonization had played an important part in determining the species compositions of different ones and that the predominance of widespread species of successional habitats elsewhere reflected a high rate of generalist dispersal .
22 In Chapter 3 it was argued that pre-colonial society was indeed authoritarian , and that this expressed itself in a great stress on the conformity of the individual , and on a hierarchy of relationships between young and old , between chiefs and people and between men and women .
23 First , it was argued that local government was financially dependent on the centre , and that ‘ he who pays the piper calls the tune ’ .
24 While this is a notoriously difficult problem , it was argued that some progress can be made .
25 On behalf of the defendant it was argued that some limitation had to be placed on the word " practice " and the natural and proper limitation was to imply the words " as medical practitioners " .
26 It was argued that this arrangement would make the scheme more popular both with contributors and with advocates of self-help , since contributors would appear to be financing their own benefits , whilst experiencing a form of training in saving .
27 It was argued that supply-side economics offered most to the politicians , whereas theories of political business cycles suggest an ‘ incentive ’ but perhaps little real ability to manipulate the economy to secure re-election .
28 It was believed that similar action would follow very quickly in Scotland , where the Child Care Law Review was nearing completion .
29 At this time , it was believed that female genitalia were merely internal versions of the male , with the clitoris being a tiny penis , and it was the greater heat of the male that had expelled his organs .
30 It was believed that this intervention would be aided if the state had control of certain key industries ( eg coal , railways , gas , electricity distribution ) , which were crucial to post-war economic recovery and which were in such a rundown state that it was unlikely that sufficient private capital would materialise to rejuvenate them .
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