Example sentences of "that [pers pn] [vb base] he [prep] " in BNC.

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1 The old Frenchman was delighted with the tobacco and soap and he insisted that I join him in a drink .
2 One officer suggested behind his hand that I visit him at his home after work , and in exchange for this little attention he would write me a six-month permis de séjour .
3 Not quite able to turn this down , he insists instead that I telephone him on Saturday morning to confirm .
4 Clive Kemp 's suggestion that she join him on a cruise across the Mediterranean had seemed the perfect antidote to a long hard winter , a series of temping jobs which had been more demanding than usual , and the unpleasantness of her break-up with Giles .
5 That 's what I 'm saying , right , now , what I 'm saying is there 's a , that , that , is , there 's , there 's , there 's , there 's things , there 's things , there 's guides to be able to do that , right , and the guide is there 's certain things you do and certain things you do n't do , because what you do basically is that you close him on his final objection which is what you 're just saying you did , right , but you close him on his final objection , how did you manage to close him on his final objection ?
6 Or is it that you want him to ? ’
7 ‘ Do you — did you — love me so little , Neil , that you believe him without question , and me not at all ? ’
8 He 's aware of concern expressed by Parish Council and he 's going to see them and he will be very happy to come and er speak to us and answer any questions that we wish him to , so I advised him to contact the clerk to make arrangements .
9 It contradicts and condemns us in our pride , our self-sufficiency , our ethics , our politics , and our religion which , far from being our point of closest access to God , is the house we build in order to hide ourselves from him , to convince ourselves that we have him in our control .
10 It is precisely because our Lord suffered these things that we recognise him as not only God but human , like us .
11 It was said in Scorer v Seymour-Johns [ 1966 ] 3 All ER 347 per Salmon LJ that the special element can be characterised as the connection relying on the employee to the extent that they regard him as the business rather than his employer : in that case the employer 's business had many recurring customers ( cf Fellowes & Son v Fisher [ 1975 ] 2 All ER 829 ) .
12 To the extent that they destroy him as a competitor , they destroy him , speaking generally and largely , as a customer .
13 That they have him in the Tower of London . ’
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