Example sentences of "that [pers pn] have [verb] [pron] to " in BNC.

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1 Well we 've we only went to the if you like the training session of the er erm participants yesterday and we 've got our next meeting on the 22nd February that I 've invited you to at .
2 And then I feel that I 've given myself to somebody who thinks my heart is a pretty flower .
3 Anyway , now that I 've got you to myself for a moment can we make some plans ?
4 I told him that I 'd seen her in the company of a minder I did n't like the look of and that I 'd followed them to Woolwich .
5 ‘ But before I could say anything I discovered suddenly that I 'd meant nothing to you but an unimportant little romantic adventure , ’ he added bitterly .
6 ‘ I was under the impression that I had explained it to you .
7 Having replied Yes with much confidence in his initial request I did not think I could take two steps to the rear , so I hastened to add that the job would take me some considerable time as ti would be my spare-time/spare-time job , consoled myself with the thought that it was the first time that I had made anything to be used in a church , so it would be a challenge .
8 Now that I had to get it to the by taxi and she had seven stitches put in the leg and , I had to leave her there for six hours , well then it was a taxi back home , I could n't now I am on income support , but that cost me fifty four pound , ninety five and I am paying that .
9 Based on that I have to give it to Mel cos he could also bend the ball around the wall to score — I never saw Lorimer do that ( he did nt have to ! ) .
10 It is for this reason that I have confined myself to novels concerned with the period before 1914 .
11 Helen had confessed at lunch that she would sooner have been three behind than three in front — and when news came , after the first 10 holes of the fourth round , that she had fallen one to the rear of the Australian , one had the feeling that she was merely paving the way for a last-minute attack .
12 Had n't he understood that she had given herself to him for the only reason that made any sense to her .
13 The frustration of what she could only identify as love for him , plus the fact that she 'd given herself to him so completely , mixed with her suspicion that he was still using her in some way to further his own undisclosed purposes , had engendered a turmoil of emotions within her , among which , she was ashamed and horrified to realise , lurked a certain impulse to exercise violence on his person .
14 She thought he must be disappointed that she was n't going home , and realised in dismay that she 'd wanted him to be glad to know she was staying .
15 I heard that she 'd followed you to Sydney . ’
16 That she 'd introduced him to the Fletchers to keep him there … well , she deserved it .
17 She sits and watches , and they do not even realize that she has provoked them to it .
18 I 've got this feeling that she has given it to Sophie
19 When I made love to you , and then , even more devastating , discovered I was the first , that you 'd chosen me to be your first lover , it was like … capturing the castle , stealing the Crown Jewels … ’
20 Well , er , wh what we want to do , what we want to do is to relate this manifest content that you 've told us to what , what 's the other thing ?
21 Finally , assuming that you have made it to the right starting line in plenty of time , wearing the right kit and your race number , and are facing the correct way when the cannon sounds , there is just one last piece of essential advice : do n't panic !
22 So here we 'd actually have a match of all three saying that we 've recognized it to a level three .
23 The observant reader will have noticed that we have helped ourselves to the content of the features proposed by Hymes and the co-ordinates proposed by Lewis in a fairly arbitrary way .
24 Such is the importance of education and training that we have committed ourselves to a programme of investment of £1.7 billion .
25 Finally , by focusing upon the deficiencies of the young unemployed — their lack of training , their lack of qualifications , their lack of job search skills — it appeared that they had caused themselves to be unemployed .
26 Why should he feel that they had bred him to disappointment ?
27 That our perceptual apparatus is reliable and our abductive sense is sound do not , for the Quinean position , need arguing ; we have ample evidence that they have guided us to the truth on many occasions .
28 He retained an affection for Paris and a gratitude for the intellectual advantages that it had given him to which he later referred as pope .
29 But she could n't let him see that it had meant something to her .
30 I explained how it was that as a child I had been told I was an eidetiker but that it had meant nothing to me .
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