Example sentences of "he [adv] believed that " in BNC.

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1 Passionately , he told it he still believed that , like a human soul , its essential persona would continue to exist after its hardware was destroyed , because this reality was only one of many possible eigen states .
2 As for the matter of the diversion of funds , he still believed that there had never been such a thing .
3 Frank Dick is one of the most academically knowledgeable coaches in the world , and aside from the personal differences between us , I think he genuinely believed that I was more useful in one of the central legs of the race .
4 He genuinely believed that the economy was fundamentally sound and that the Depression would pass .
5 He genuinely believed that this was the least the belligerents could do in return for the " sacrifices " made by Spain during the Civil War .
6 Nonetheless , he genuinely believed that everything he said was true .
7 In spite of all evidence to the contrary , he always believed that we were leaving bokra , tomorrow .
8 Clearly he hardly believed that she would stay the course .
9 Perhaps , like so many others , he sincerely believed that it was a just war and fought for his values in righteousness .
10 He fervently believed that if there was enough consultation the lists would solve the problems of children 's reading at a stroke .
11 Gradually it dawned on Peter that Molland wanted more than confirmation of his decisions and to demonstrate his own honesty : he honestly believed that this numbingly tedious attention to detail was doing Peter a favour by distracting him from his grief .
12 Yes , and Li Yuan would fight to preserve the boy , for he honestly believed that he could control him .
13 When he was accused , quite erroneously , of siphoning money from school funds he honestly believed that everyone would realise that there 'd been a mistake . ’
14 For later he also believed that the motor accident and its consequences could have destroyed his morale but for the tranquil worship of the little Oxfordshire village which for the time was his base .
15 He also believed that the proprietor should be the arbitrator of how the proposals operated , but that this would not undermine the role of the Press Council as final arbitrator .
16 He also believed that greater financial support for the WEA could be obtained from the LEAs in the region .
17 He also believed that there is a perpetual strife of opposites : hot and cold , wet and dry , and so on , are each necessary complements to the other and their eternal conflict is the very basis of existence .
18 But he also believed that Christian apologetics needed to be explicated in order that their meaning could be made clearer to us .
19 Wheatstone 's work in telegraphy seemed to show that electricity travelled about as fast as light , and Faraday believed that it must go just as fast ; he also believed that gravity must be analogous to other attractive forces , and take time for its propagation , though there was no evidence for this .
20 He also believed that the worker was rational and would respond to financial incentives as a way of increasing productivity .
21 he also believed that ‘ women are born loves ’ .
22 In 1958 he believed that he was founding a republic that would serve France well for many years to come , but he also believed that in the immediate future his presence was essential to France 's safety and renewal .
23 With Bevin he also believed that Britain would have much less influence in Washington without some nuclear capability of her own .
24 The burden of proof is shifted on to the defendant and although the prosecution does not need to prove that the accused intended that the impression be false and misleading , the defendant may need to establish that he reasonably believed that it would not be so .
25 He now believed that reference to individual cruelty cases hindered the argument of the cause .
26 He now believed that id only the Shah apologized , then the British would restore him .
27 Where he had formerly regarded British devaluation or a retreat from East of Suez as totally contrary to American interests , he now believed that the damage to those interests would be tolerable if the British — by their own choice — embarked upon a long-term and systematic attempt to put their economy to rights .
28 He really believed that he could do this through , through the form of the Blitzkrieg , that is through a limited war er which would secure military objectives and then produce a political peace and the model er for his er policy was in fact the eighteenth century where many wars occurred between European powers wa impo imperial wars and wars on , on t on er total Europe , but none of these wars resulted in the destruction of any state .
29 At the same time he profoundly believed that in the church Jew and Gentile were to be united in one fellowship .
30 In the end he almost believed that Sredni Vashtar himself had sent the toothache .
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