Example sentences of "[that] he [verb] [verb] [det] " in BNC.

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1 But as for the long-term , he acknowledges that non-IBM sales will be key to Havant 's success , and says that he hopes to see half of the plant 's output going to new customers .
2 . He said oh he said I 'll have that he said get some
3 The methods that he chose to investigate this phenomenon were mainly social-psychological , enquiring into the motivations and psychological reactions of individual peasants rather than into the concrete structures and conditions of their lives .
4 It was only after his second marriage , when he was able to share his life with another human being , that he began to take any real satisfaction in his life 's work .
5 That he managed to summon enough energy to make any collections at all during his stay is something of a miracle ; had he been more thorough and punctilious in his methods he would have saved history , as well as himself , a lot of time and trouble when it came to corroborating the theories that were to bring him such fame , and infamy , many years later .
6 As I understand it , Kitto J. is saying that the mere availability to the payee of summary remedies for non-payment may amount to sufficient compulsion on the payer to entitle him to recover irrespective of whether the payee has given any indication that he proposes to exercise such remedies .
7 There is no specific exemption for cold calls in relation to futures transactions although calls on existing customers may be made where the investor has indicated in writing before the call is made that he envisages receiving such calls .
8 Thus , it may be desirable to draw a patient 's attention to any inconsistency between his expressed attitudes and his actual behaviour ( e.g. a therapist pointed out to a patient that the latter insisted that he wished to tackle some problem in his home yet arranged to go out every evening with his friends ) .
9 The Chancellor announced in last November 's Autumn Statement that he wished to enhance this private sector involvement .
10 It was possible to hear the way he summoned the old man , calling his name in a mocking tone , calling out for his dreams , calling that he wished to eat those dreams .
11 I do n't know anything about Mr Rochester 's character , but I do know that he offered to marry this young girl , who only discovered during the wedding ceremony that he was in fact already married , to a mad woman .
12 Where he was intellectually confused was that he failed to see any close connection between the economic stance of his Government and its industrial problems .
13 At his farewell , received various gifts from the company and workmates , and said that he plans to devote more time to his allotment and to his duties of vice-chairman and bar-chairman at the Ipswich Conservative Club .
14 I mean obviously once she 's been through the learning process herself , so Doug came away feeling quite pleased that he 'd made that contact and he also sort of made one or two , he , he had one or two wise observations I think about the evening , he made one or two new contacts himself and the suggestion and things , he spoke very well about it , at our committee on our last meeting last week
15 On the odd occasions I met him , I felt that he 'd adopted all these trappings to keep off a world with which he could not cope .
16 No point in taking trouble with him ; no point in explaining that he 'd walked all the way up to the blooming rectory to set his mind at rest .
17 ‘ Simon told me , last night , ’ began Gazzer , ‘ that he 'd smashed that kiosk up .
18 He began crying and shouting — that he 'd known all along she was having an affair and was planning to leave him .
19 The boy , who ca n't be identified , hit the headlines in June … after revelations that he 'd spent several weeks at his grandparents ' house on the Costa Blanca at tax payers ' expense .
20 She had always suspected that he 'd had little time for any brain power that she might possess — just as she had always known that her chief value for him had been the almost instantaneous sexual desire they had felt for each other .
21 Cos Michael started it , he said we 're never said anything when we set off in the car , and then he said that he 'd had this fax from me and er Andrew said , well it was n't actually from , er , from me to the , it was fetched up to me and I sent it in the office .
22 ‘ Oh , he decided that he 'd had enough and wanted to go back to being a teacher . ’
23 Bri and I assumed that he 'd had enough of his countrymen and wanted to tune out .
24 So he made a cup of coffee ( realising , sensibly for once , that he 'd had enough alcohol ) , and sat down in the low upholstered chair with wooden arms that was one of the room 's few comforts .
25 Was this a hint that he 'd had enough of her company for tonight ?
26 And I says only that he 's gone to back to J J and I says , and that he 'd had enough .
27 They told us that he had insulted most of their friends , and that he dearly loved a political argument .
28 Constance , who felt that he had said this a thousand times before , usually shrugged impatiently .
29 She had not told her son to keep away from the course because she had not been aware that he had gone that way .
30 The first point which everybody had overlooked was that Wordsworth hoped ‘ to make money ’ with Lyrical Ballads , and presumably thought that he had gone some way in making concessions to popular taste .
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