Example sentences of "he [verb] that [det] [adj] [noun pl] " in BNC.

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1 Armstrong was still there and in one piece , though I walked around him to check that all four wheels were in place before we got in .
2 He insists that these two cases be divorced .
3 Well , he understands that those Norwegian Lapps that are closer to the border than he is might not be so keen .
4 He dislikes aspects of life with Lancashire , especially the dictate that at certain times he should wear tie and blazer ; he rightly resents missing out on a sponsored car when the county toured Australia ; he recalls verbal run-ins with opponents , including Viv Richards , and believes the Australians ' tough attitude is simply ‘ rude ’ ; and he thinks that many English players are terrified long before they go out to bat ’ .
5 He found that these adopted children still developed schizophrenia more often than a comparison group of adopted children whose biological mothers had no known record of mental illness ( Rosenthal , 1968 ) .
6 He found that most shy toddlers remained timid at seven .
7 He promised that more such documents from the archives of the CPSU central committee would be released .
8 He says that another 5 minutes and many of the cattle would have perished , because the shed they were in exploded into flames .
9 Also a field observer of insects , he noticed that many edible butterflies had the same bright markings as inedible ones .
10 He added that several other governments have requested copies of the draft bill from the Sri Lankan government .
11 He believed that many legitimate visitors would be forced to park on the main road because the council had closed the track .
12 He believed that all living forms can be related into a single developmental sequence .
13 Responding to the Amnesty report in a BBC interview on April 19 , the then Minister for Planning , Salman Abdul Razek as Mutawa , denied that human rights violations were continuing unchecked , although he acknowledged that some human rights violations may have occurred immediately after the liberation of the country .
14 He showed that many young children separated from their mothers for admissions to hospital or a residential nursery experienced an acute stress reaction followed by disturbing behaviour lasting many months .
15 One may say , ‘ He strove that such innocent creatures should
16 These forecasts were criticized because both current practice and future intentions with regard to increased access to HE meant that many mature entrants to HE particularly in the public sector — who admit between 70 per cent and 80 per cent of mature entrants — do not possess the formal qualifications for HE .
17 Kosa sees this charismatic character as peculiar to medicine and clergy , although he notes that some Protestant denominations have weakened or eliminated the charismatic authority of the clergyman .
18 He expects that many overall advantages will be achieved with the scheme .
19 He proved that all 17,000 verses could be minutely inscribed on a piece of parchment 10.8 in by 8.4 in , which could then be folded up and placed in a walnut shell .
20 He maintains that both these changes — expansion of the non-marketed sector and contraction of the marketed sector — are symptoms
21 He said that all 10,000 students would have to leave the campus with their belongings by last night .
22 A vice-principal of a teachers ' university probably spoke on behalf of many party members in positions of responsibility when he said that some young comrades lacked the ‘ backbone of Marxism-Leninism ’ , especially those studying liberal arts subjects .
23 In a covering letter he said that some further amendments would be needed :
24 Law was only giving credit where due when he said that these two groups ‘ have from the first been the main-props of the new National Free Church movement ’ .
25 Here the Crick hypothesis has an advantage over the others , in that he proposes that those mysterious extraterrestrials did not simply scatter spores willy-nilly but sent out a computer-controlled spacecraft containing the spores as cargo .
26 He suggests that many assumed effects of low vision , for example field loss , totally ignored the brain and the whole mechanics and chemistry of visual perception .
27 He suggested that many Western partners in joint ventures were blatant speculators , " shadow wheeler-dealers " and the " rejects of entrepreneurship " .
28 He argues that all other forms of therapy are simply tranquillizers , helping people to adapt rather than change , or else to find an addiction like meditation or relaxation that offers temporary relief to which we will always need to return .
29 He argues that some Conservative leaders were predisposed to fight local elections on party lines from the moment that the modern system of local government was introduced .
30 He stresses that these perceptual computations construct the image , which is a symbolic description ( or articulated representation ) of the scene based on the initial stimulus-array .
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