Example sentences of "[that] [pers pn] [be] [prep] [adj] " in BNC.

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1 Besides , he wrote , now that I am at last working on the big glass and have set up the two panels and locked them into their metal frame , notions like success and failure are no longer pertinent , there is only the project and its outcome , project , scribbled Goldberg in the margin , outcome , and words like success and failure can safely be left to others , wrote Harsnet .
2 Here I must admit that I am on shaky ground .
3 It is not , wrote Harsnet ( typed Goldberg ) , that I am under any illusion on this score .
4 You will be happy to hear that I am in excellent health and the colony agrees with me well .
5 Our recruitment to English ( and it is with English that I am in this paper principally concerned ) was again untypical .
6 er we we 've we 've agreed the table on on the base basis of erm information best information available a at the moment but but equally I would n't wish it to be seen th that I am in any way attempting to prejudge the outcome of er local plan studies , erm so the information that I 've agreed with with Mr C Cunnane is basically an attempt to clarify the tabulation fo er in
7 Perhaps it stems from a sensation that I am in some way making a prediction of awful catastrophe , and not just telling a story .
8 Now it so happens that I am in some small way , relatively well qualified to stand here in Lynda 's place .
9 I only wish that my father could know that I 'm at last setting up on my own …
10 Not that I 'm in any position to pass judgement . ’
11 Not that I 'm against paid pews for those that can afford them , but in moderation .
12 It 's not that I 'm against autobiographical writing I just generally do n't think it makes good , or true , fiction .
13 Do n't that I was over impressed with Tammy Girl , were you ?
14 when I first came when I first came , that was the one thing that I was like that was the fact that that I might be pushed that way whereas I only
15 While the war continued I could ( almost ) fool myself into believing that I was like those other women who were merely separated from their men ‘ for the duration ’ — or , if not that , at least I felt that my life was suspended .
16 I bear you no ill will , for well I found the tables entirely turned upon me , and that I was in far ore danger from you than you were from me for I was just upon resolving to defy all the censures of the world and to make you publicly and openly my wife . "
17 If it comes to light that I was in that house with Adam and the others , he thought with cold clarity , if someone tells the papers , or the police and thence the papers , that I was there during the summer of 1976 , living there , it will be all up with me .
18 By the time I had replaced the telephone in its cradle I had realized in a sudden , terrifying swoop of misery that I was in genuine danger .
19 And that was my problem with it was that I was in much in terms of being able to go into the classroom an and talk to the kids and have a really good relationship with the teachers and things .
20 ‘ It was through their trust that I was in this unique position to walk among them , and I felt I owed it to them not to let them down . ’
21 Again I was making no contact with the flying control and as I did not have a WT operator I could not use my wireless set to inform the station that I was in this predicament .
22 Lest anybody should have got the idea from my August column that I was in some way in favour of four-year funding of students of architecture , let me set the record straight .
23 I always gave my husband the benefit of the doubt and ‘ buried ’ his brutality because I was so ashamed and felt that I was in some way to blame .
24 I hardly knew how I was able to face it , either then or at any other time of my life in this mocking world , but I did , though it did not seem to me that I was in any way heroic — just the opposite , in fact .
25 I was , simply , not prepared to go on with the discomfort of feeling — or knowing other people might feel — that I was in any way neglecting my family .
26 I glowed when they gave me their expert c , pinion that I was in most respects ‘ a normal young man ’ .
27 I made some comm-calls to contacts on planets here and there , pretending to some that I was looking for commissions , to others that I was in different parts of the galaxy transporting things for different people .
28 Although I denied being ill and scorned to make the demands for attention usually employed by invalids or malingerers , there is no doubt that I was by this time making a bid for power .
29 At home the attitude of my parents-in-law was that I was from outside Pakistan , so I must be very independent — although I never showed my independence .
30 You see he 's so unlucky that his is on all play .
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