Example sentences of "he believed that [det] " in BNC.
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1 | He believed that such an event would lead to a loss of belief in the will of the USA to maintain her commitments throughout the area . |
2 | He believed that many legitimate visitors would be forced to park on the main road because the council had closed the track . |
3 | He believed that many of these slips revealed some kind of sexual subconscious which suddenly ‘ accidentally ’ is brought to the conscious . |
4 | He believed that all home-produced cheese would rise in price and that the number of varieties would shrink . |
5 | He was able to tolerate this because he did have a kind of ultimate theological perspective of his own : in a style that owed a good deal to Hegel , he believed that all history is a movement of the spirit which is on the way to a return to God , and will at the last find its home in God . |
6 | He believed that all living forms can be related into a single developmental sequence . |
7 | He believed that these monuments succeeded compositionally from five or six angles . |
8 | He believed that these groups were helping to alleviate the effects of catastrophes caused by the dawning of the New Age . |
9 | His diffidence with secondary art teachers , he intimated , was because he believed that these folk had had longer formal training and more paper qualifications than himself . |
10 | He believed that this was referred to by Geoffrey of Monmouth in the twelfth century . |
11 | He believed that this recording was one of the essential means to feed the imagination of children and so promote further creative work in a variety of fields . |
12 | He believed that this would reveal that the evolution of society followed ‘ invariable laws ’ . |
13 | He believed that some people are already moving to higher and higher planes of the mind , and there is here an endless potential . |
14 | This was not because he had any interest in values realized in animal life , but because he believed that some degree of goodness pertained to things or states of affairs which do not involve consciousness of any kind . |