Example sentences of "that [pers pn] have [prep] [adj] [noun sg] " in BNC.

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1 My doctor had also prepared a report for the judge , about various medical problems which I hoped might be taken into consideration , along with the fact that I had for some time been re-building my life and now had very little to do with the lifestyle that brought me into contact with drugs .
2 You were n't of afraid of me but the accent that I had at that time .
3 Except that I had in some way to justify myself .
4 The Christians good news is that guilt and shame that I have of such behaviour is actually taken away from me .
5 He recalled tales about her , that she had at one time belonged to a respectable family of farmers ; unbelievable now , for she could certainly no longer be placed in that category .
6 The accounts that you have for this year , have been rearranged .
7 And you know it , it 's amazing how since my involvement for the last two years in Great Britain , all the problems that you have with critical illness , all the problems .
8 In the event that you have at any time during the currency of your appointment any grievance concerning your appointment with the Board then you should raise that with your line manager .
9 Cos , on , on the tape that we had at that party we were
10 On his last sortie to an Italian target , of all places , he sustained tremendous flak damage which rather belied the sort of opinion that we had of Italian flak .
11 That 's based on the same number of colour photographs that we had in last year 's annual report .
12 Plus the rebate that we had from that project .
13 Ah this is fibre that we have on this bed
14 Much of the systematic information that we have on this subject comes from the survey of 650 US firms discussed at the beginning of this section .
15 Yeah erm the amount of police necessary for each area is based on all sorts of statistics , and for the statis statistics that we have for this area , we have or the chief constable 's decided that he 'll allocate a hundred and two police officers to police this area , which we find adequate .
16 ‘ But how are we ever going to listen to each other if we hold the views that we have about each other , and if we talk the way we talk to each other the way we do in the cases ? ’
17 We pointed out to him that we have in that county a structure of adult basic education and community further education which the rest of the country can only dream of .
18 Because they do not have the trade union structure that we have in this country or the record of trade union militancy that so damaged this country in the 1970s and to which we have no intention whatsoever of returning .
19 Er but in certainly in the case of our bank , er we are most anxious to at least get people in through the door and see if we can find solutions to their problems , find ways of er developing smaller businesses , erm hopefully to reduce the massive unemployment figure that we have in this country .
20 I mean it may well be that we have in this country we have erm pretty much Mill 's system because MPs get paid relatively little bearing in mind what most of them could be getting elsewhere , so maybe we 've got something like Mill 's system but it strikes us as rather a bizarre suggestion that MPs should n't be paid to prevent adventurous and lower classes becoming MPs .
21 But by the nature of the staff that we have in this school , I do n't know whether Mr Goddard deliberately tries to surround himself with fools so that the school will collapse when he leaves , but the quality of the people that he has , in terms of having a broad idea of education is just a non-starter .
22 Now one of the things that we have in this city that I do n't think they have as many in Ipswich are students and that must be one of the biggest , they are they party revellers of the century , they have parties all the time .
23 At a meeting of a committee of the Skupština in December 1986 , the Federal Secretary of Finance said : ‘ We must face our reality — that we have in this economy and in this country a very serious state of financial disorder …
24 Erm , I think the charge that has been laid against myself personally and my myself and my colleagues is the charge of vacillation and changing our mind and I and I am grateful to c my colleague David for reminding us that we have in this county had two years two years when the Labour party and the Conservative party have been hand in glove , absolutely determined that the way forward in relation to homes , elderly persons homes , not that 's not to close any and now we 've had a complete volte face when they 've changed their minds and they 've come along with us .
25 Schüssler Fiorenza however wants to suggest ( as at times Trible does also ) that we have in any case to live within — and thus also we need to try to redeem — the trajectory of biblical religion .
26 On one occasion , when time had been scheduled in a departmental meeting for discussion of my questions , ten out of twelve members of staff present indicated that they had at one time or another received complaints from girls ( usually in the third or fourth year ) about the male bias of their overall literary ‘ diet ’ .
27 Now when I tell you about lodging houses , we had four registered lodging houses in Ipswich that they had at that time .
28 I do n't know if anyone wants to put anything into the pool of things that , points that we raised and er or a general feeling that they had after that meeting .
29 Secondly , it means that the person who has been arrested under section 7(3) of the Act of 1976 by a constable without warrant has the matter resolved one way or the other within 24 hours , or sooner if practicable , subject to the exceptions of Christmas Day , Good Friday and Sundays , and the prosecution , if they wish a remand in custody or the imposition of more stringent conditions , must make sure that they have within that time period sufficient material to place before the justice to enable the justice to form one of the opinions set out in section 7(5) .
30 The surviving corner showed that it had at some stage been thickened to 7½ft or possibly , as the plan suggests , extended to form a buttress or column base .
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