Example sentences of "he [vb -s] that a [adj] [noun] " in BNC.

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1 He thinks that a proportional representation voting system is more important than the constitutional future of Scotland .
2 He says that a good doctor should always make the patient feel comfortable about examinations , but patients should also make sure that another person is on hand .
3 He says that a substantial amount has been paid in benefits , it 's not true to say that they owe the tenants a large amount of arrears .
4 He says that a new generation of students has been considering the " facts " that remain from a very different angle .
5 He says that a lower rice price would not only help his constituents but also make Japan 's economy stronger — which is , after all , a good nationalist aim .
6 Mr Large himself is impressed by the SEC , though he warns that a single regulator could be a bureaucratic juggernaut .
7 Since Poulantzas insists on an objective analysis of classes , and since he assumes that a satisfactory definition ought to characterise all classes without exception , he rejects historicism on the grounds that it has failed to escape from the problematic of individualism .
8 He ays that a three bedroom flat is not ideal for the project , as up to ninety children often gather there .
9 Change haunts Spenser , even when he acknowledges that a providential order is operating .
10 However , the car dealer will not need to rely upon those defences if he ensures that a false trade description is not applied .
11 Only if he feels that a private sector or B R management would be er frightened off bidding , and he knew that there were viable bids in play
12 He suspects that a black mark went firmly down against his name for turning down the job and when he was later asked to become personnel manager for that division of ICI he was left in no doubt that it was an offer he should not refuse .
13 By his recommendation he implies that a reasonable investigation has been made and that his recommendation rests on the conclusions based on that investigation .
14 Methodologically , Coffield suggests that explanations must move from individualistic psychological ones to collectivistic , sociological ones ( how economic explanations fit in is somewhat unclear ) ; politically he suggests that a minimum income must be the answer .
15 At the same time , he suggests that a unified description could be given in terms of a theory of discourse .
16 He argues that a central aim of Conservatism has been ‘ to discredit the social democratic concept of universal citizenship rights , guaranteed and enforced through public agencies , and to replace it with a concept of citizenship rights achieved through property ownership and participation in markets ’ .
17 He argues that a good deal of the apparent need for substitute child care is produced by social deprivation and its attendant pressures , rather than by parental inadequacy or culpability per se .
18 Similarly , he claims that a powerful test in China in May was to blame for various natural disasters in Central Asia and an earthquake in California .
19 if he believes that a criminal offence has been committed and he believes that the officer ought to be charged .
20 He believes that a high viewpoint ‘ … creates a space between the landscape and the observer , similar in its effect to the space between a picture and whoever is looking at it . ’
21 He believes that an increasing number of vehicle and equipment makers who currently build their own engines will be forced to buy at least some of what they need from independents like Perkins .
22 He knows that a profitable deal can just as easily be struck over a caesar salad and glass of mineral water as over a T-bone steak and bottle of vintage claret .
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