Example sentences of "because he [verb] [pers pn] have " in BNC.

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1 The ex-soldier seemed to get his nerve back-I guess because he realized he had to do something-and he said , " We better settle this right now . "
2 Well round near us they terrorized an eighty three year old lady er near us and er it was a , I met the man next door and his wife and they were the ones that got the police because he said they 'd got her furniture out on the pavement to with a doodah up there .
3 He put on a tape of Vivaldi and then switched it off because he said they had too much to talk about .
4 When the guard was told that no one had moved from their seats he became very worried because he said he had to make out a report to British Rail as to the cause of the delay and he then said , ‘ I 'll have to put it down to person or persons unknown ’ .
5 Dr. Goldsmith and Dr. Phillips were asked to examine him because he said he had been kicked and jumped on by the labour master , and that his body was black and blue ; no marks of violence were in fact found .
6 Her denials were useless because he said he had returned to Kington Square early that morning and seen her coming out of the flat arm in arm with a man .
7 Then , because he said he 'd missed the train — although there was still ten minutes to go — I thought he was n't at Paddington at all : I thought Kemp was probably in Oxford .
8 He killed 19-year-old Walter Smith because he believed he had been mistreating his childhood friend Sharon .
9 His point arose because he felt we had n't best differentiated his guitar from the rest of the pack in our review of it .
10 He very rarely helped round the house , because he felt we had different jobs .
11 He was the nastiest , really dangerous because he felt he had to go that extra distance .
12 I think my father 's authority was irrational because he expected me to have no other interests outside my schoolwork .
13 ‘ Yeltsin … left the Congress because he understands he has only one partner left with whom he can talk .
14 Such as the time when the very inebriated gentleman , at 2 a.m. , wanted to know how to stop his budgie falling off its perch , because he thought it had cramp in its legs !
15 In that house lived a bricklayer who murdered the baker because he thought he 'd stolen one of his pigs .
16 Christopher Hart told police he did not stop because he thought he had run over a cardboard box .
17 The court held that the facts did not constitute robbery because the accused was not dishonest , because he thought he had a legal right to the money ( see the discussion of s.2(1) ( a ) above ) .
18 Incidentally the Mirror mentioned that Lee Chapman has a new book out in which he ‘ reveals ’ that Frogslegs left in a huff because he thought he had carried the can for the defeat by Rangers .
19 And because he thought she had followed him for just that purpose ?
20 Oh yes , because he thinks he 's got perfect right to be there and nobody else .
21 Ferguson thought the Scottish striker might be forced to withdraw from the trip to Berne because he feared he had been afflicted by the same illness which has hit more than a dozen of the Old Trafford squad .
22 without protest from a parent , without a protest from a hunter without a protest from er a anyone else , that is a shame , because I tell you what , if you go drag hunting , you can keep the jobs the people are still going to have to shoe the horses traders and people like that are still going to have to produce the carriages to take the horses with them and the only people job jobs are in jeopardy are not the kennel staff it 's the terrier men and to be quite honest , ladies and gentlemen , it 's the terrier men who have actually ruined your sport , cos of what they get up to in nineteen ninety three is a disgust and at the end of the day your P R has been absolutely wrong and I hope this afternoon that Conservatives and Liberals can join with us and I 've got to thank a certain Liberal because he 's he 's put his head on the block on several occasions on this when we stood on the platform as individuals , not as politicians , as individuals on this and I think that this afternoon we 've got a way forward , we can say to the hunt , come and talk you change , we 'll give you access .
23 thing early in the week out with him and he did n't know how to operate it , so half the tapes , I mean we checked them because he 's he 's got ta write down who is speaking on on those tapes
24 He apologized when he was close enough , because he guessed he had n't been able to hear Lavinia calling to him above the noise of the Suffolk Punch .
25 So you John now Jonathan he 's only fifteen , I know he looks in his twenties , but he 's only fifteen and he 's done a lot of homework so it makes him late and it makes him uncomfortable and he 's fidgety because he knows he 's got to disturb us when he goes out , he does n't does n't enjoy disturbing us , so I have to make that clear to you .
26 Above all else , he 's a businessman and he knows I 'll do the work for less than someone with papers because he knows I have no choice . ’
27 ( I see my little chaplain snigger because he knows I have talked about her before .
28 Similarly , a dictator may feel secure and God-like because he believes he has the love of the people .
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