Example sentences of "that he [verb] [adv] [art] [adj] " in BNC.

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1 ‘ And he has so many patients with much worse ailments that he took quite a robust view of my case . ’
2 Because that , he did mention that he says so the next thing is the home 'll have to go .
3 Yet he so influenced or anticipated what was to come that he remains still the great point of departure for modern Protestant theology .
4 He looked like a buccaneer of old except that he wore not the wide-sleeved shirts and breeches of the past but the rough working clothes that had been her father 's .
5 It was there that he filled in the winning coupon , using a lucky pixie :
6 Johnny Hero played the between set music — again proving that he hosts easily the best disco in town .
7 Meiklejohn says , " Every adjective is either an explicit or an implicit predicate " , the former corresponding in his book to appearance in predicative position and the latter to attributive use ; and he goes on to show , with examples , that he takes exactly the same view as is found later in accounts given within a Chomskyan framework .
8 But there can be little doubt that he had two causes in mind , and great probability that he had also a third .
9 It is perhaps surprising that he did not count and find that he had double the actual number present , but he , too , has departed .
10 As it was a weekend , all the bigger-wig doctors were not on duty but , knowing of Nigel 's condition and that he had only a short time to live , they brought him through .
11 That he had quite the opposite intention was obvious .
12 ( 6 ) No liability shall arise by virtue of subsection ( 3 ) above if — ( a ) before the date on which proceedings to enforce the liability are finally disposed of , the former residential occupier is reinstated in the premises in question in such circumstances that he becomes again the residential occupier of them ; or ( b ) at the request of the former residential occupier , a court makes an order ( whether in the nature of an injunction or otherwise ) as a result of which he is reinstated as mentioned in paragraph ( a ) above …
13 Working with creatures of such speed it was important that he used exactly the right type of camera .
14 This is precisely what he had been attempting in " The Dry Salvages " , for example , and it is significant that he used much the same phrase in his demand that contemporary poetry should have such a strong relationship to current speech that " the listener or reader can say " that is how I should talk if I could talk poetry " .
15 The hesitant middle-aged gentleman who was brave enough to join a keep fit class later found himself confident enough to join the neighbouring management training and business start-up class , and grew in confidence and ability to the extent that he opened up a new business .
16 The advice given is , and I quote , ‘ I would recommend to any amateur painter that he put up a large sign in his studio or room .
17 I only know that he turned up a few hours after the accident and got into some row with the head copper .
18 But although he was so sensitive to conversation that he picked up the slightest nuance , his combination of " tea party cosiness and cold intellectuality " was " if not exactly intimidating , at least restraining " .
19 In the middle of the Great War , the Emperor Charles told his foreign minister Czernin that he wanted neither a military nor an economic agreement with his ally , Germany , because that might fit the Hohenzollern design to make of Austria a second Bavaria .
20 It 's not just that he has withdrawn from the business of running a diocese , or that he walks abroad a great deal at night but is scarcely seen during the day , or that he often wo n't accept phone calls .
21 Every golfer in the world experiences that awful feeling of helplessness when he stands over a putt and knows that he has not the slightest chance of getting the ball near the hole , let alone into it .
22 He simply replies that he has n't the faintest idea .
23 Rollnik , for example , finds that he has roughly the same number of really bright students in a year now as in 1960 .
24 Any honest assessment of his chances of pulling this off should start from the realisation that he has only a few rusty tools at his disposal .
25 Works by Hogarth hung in the gallery at Slains : the library contained ‘ a valuable numerous collection ’ , and Boswell renders one of his usual excellent off-the-cuff services to our understanding of eighteenth-century domestic arrangements : ‘ The noble owner has built of brick , along the square on the inside , a gallery , both on the first and second story , the house being no higher ; so that he has always a dry walk , and the rooms , to which formerly there was no approach but through each other , have now all separate entries from the gallery . ’
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