Example sentences of "[Wh det] he [verb] [pron] [modal v] [vb infin] " in BNC.

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1 But on the question of competitive tendering I think mentioned by Mr which he says we should have a different attitude .
2 The first move in the latest court assault against Mr Bond — which he says he will contest vigorously — came after the market closed on Friday .
3 ' … which he thought he might have been wearing that afternoon and then changed his mind and said he had n't , ’ continued Harris , unperturbed by the interruption .
4 But he had not moulded the politics of Britain into a form which he thought he could control .
5 His espousal of Blast closed to him just those doors that were on the point of opening ; and twenty years later , when he desperately wanted such access to the power-wielding centres of society , he was condemned to the world of fantasy in which he thought he could influence United States policy by way of such unlikely intermediaries as Senators Borah and Bankhead , and Italian policy by way of Ubaldo degli Uberti .
6 She was regarding the Prince with the faintest and saddest of smiles , in which he thought he could read affection and indulgence , and surely also a soft , secret gleam of derision .
7 L.R. 162 was ‘ very close to it , ’ Ward J. defined the two questions which he thought he should answer , made findings of fact and answered those questions in the following passage from his judgment :
8 But Moore assumes we can ascribe inherent value to smaller units of reality and indeed this may be a necessary presupposition for the kind of calculations on the basis of which he thinks we should decide what is most worth doing .
9 Look how he scrubs around in the records to turn up individual cases of leukaemia which he thinks he can ascribe to nuclear energy .
10 So he re he represents sort of old fashioned moral values and he opposes the kind of fascism which he thinks he can see in Nick
11 Something which he feels you should oversee . ’
12 These have something of the character and purpose of propaganda about them and they therefore need cautious exegesis , but they at least manifest the king 's view of his subjects ' expectations and in doing so reveal the model to which he felt he should conform .
13 He led her up some stairs to a steel gallery from which he said they would get a bird's-eye-view of the operation .
14 King Charles I visited the community in 1633 and afterwards borrowed its Great Concordance of the Gospels , which he said he would return only if another were made for him .
15 The only thing we had argued about recently was the motorbike , which he said he would buy me when I was a bit older .
16 He felt an urge to reach out and rescue some of the sheets of paper on which he imagined he could see writing , but the heat was extreme .
17 In hardback , which he knew she 'd think an unnecessary extravagance .
18 Nicholson was also preparing another project from which he hoped he would emerge as a recognized director , and again it was in part an overhang from that period in 1968 when he seriously considered giving up acting , and moving into writing and directing .
19 LABOUR candidate Alan Milburn yesterday presented residents in a Darlington street with a cheque for £7,619.44 which he claims they will save if his party is elected .
20 But the fit of jealousy in which he beats her would appear to mean something more than these words of explanation enable one to understand .
21 But sixteen days later , on 18 February 1756 , Miller quickly wrote to apologise for giving the wrong name of the ship by which he had sent seeds , roses and cedar cones , and also to thank Bartram for his letter of 9 December in which he mentioned he would like the Norway Maple .
22 Even young people have ideas and can make up their own minds , and he did n't want to tell us what he thought we should do because it was our lives and he realised that . ’
23 For a bachelor , too , the working conditions and the pay were well above what he thought he could command elsewhere .
24 It 's a lot better than what he thought it would have been .
25 But suppose we think that everything that is said purports to be a statement of fact , and suppose we think that for someone to be justified in saying what he says he must say it on the basis of something he has observed .
26 Cook told her if she did not do what he said he would kill her .
27 That 's where he was , and he did exactly what he said he 'd do .
28 oh , we do n't want to lose him before explore it , of course do explore it with him , that 's what he said you 'll have to ask Mr about it
29 As soon as I 've proved you 're not what he thinks he 'll have to eat his words .
30 You get the child who draws what he knows he can draw well .
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