Example sentences of "he [verb] [conj] [adj] [noun] " in BNC.

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1 Moreover he doubts whether full disclosure is in any way feasible .
2 According to an auction house representative the latter is the more likely outcome , because he doubts whether some countries , for example Italy , will be able to clamp down on smuggling .
3 He will bring with him over 20 dogs from the London tracks , supplied by friends and contacts he made while head lad to Hackney trainer David Vowles .
4 ALAN Hickman from Derbyshire became worried about the advice he was receiving over his pension transfer when he realised that each expert he consulted recommended a different course of action .
5 Mowbray 's hand fell to his sword hilt as he realised that great brass tongue only tolled when the Tower was under attack .
6 He realised that fine-enough markings would be too difficult to read so he wound along a part of one arm of the balance a tight spiral of very fine brass wire , extending from where the suspended weight would balance metal A ( suspended in water ) to where it would balance metal B ( suspended in water ) .
7 The devil , Trent thought , and found himself smiling as he realised that continual fear had acted as a drug , lifting him free of reality in the same way that marathon runners broke through the pain barrier into an almost hallucinatory state of calm .
8 Initially , he presumed that this phenomenon was merely a personal idiosyncrasy , but later observations showed that this was not the case at all : the tensing-up of neck muscles is practically universal .
9 When he succeeded as fifth baronet in 1758 he was ready to rebuild the house .
10 According to Cyril Ray in his penetrating profile Bollinger ( 1971 ) , one house was spared and he records that fifteen years after the riots Madame Bollinger overheard a passer-by outside one of her windows say , ‘ That 's the Bollinger house , you know : we did n't touch it during the riots here — as a matter of fact , we lowered our flag to it when we passed ! ’ 'Probably the red flag , ’ Madame is supposed to have commented with pleased irony .
11 If the right hon. Gentleman is genuinely concerned about recovery , what does he think that higher taxes would do to it ?
12 He hypothesised that left handers who employed the upright posture ( indicative of contralateral cerebral lateralisation of language ) should perform better with the left hand than inverted sinistral writers .
13 He agreed that certain regions , even those as large as Highland could be retained .
14 He agreed that moral development was in 3 stages , but believed that these were divided into two parts .
15 He agreed that this advice had been good but said that things had now gone too far .
16 He agreed that some training groups might pull out but others would take their place .
17 get me , find me more work he goes cos next week he 's gon na give me a blow job if I 'm lucky
18 The image was well established ; and it is hardly surprising that when , in 1521 , the canny and obsessively fair-minded scholar John Major produced his book entitled A History of Greater Britain , in which he argued that better relations with England would make good sense , for political and economic reasons , the plea fell on ears deafened by the awareness that a little nation had fought off a monster by courage and tenacity .
19 These ‘ social capital ’ arguments may have been what Titmuss meant when he argued that major wars increase governmental concern for women and children , and produce social policies to protect them .
20 He argued that two bodies of the same material but different weights would fall at different speeds .
21 He argued that many organisations ( especially those that were relatively long-lasting and dependent on leaderships for their organisation and continuance ) could be interpreted in terms of the transference of early childhood affections .
22 He argued that Labour policy-making , though democratic in concept , was defective in practice .
23 He argued that greater emphasis needed to be placed on the practical applications of scientific work if Britain 's economic downturn were to be reversed .
24 However he argued that ancient woodlands were still under threat from new planting and new road developments — for example the proposed destruction of Oxleas Wood in south east London , to make way for a Thames crossing .
25 His position was itself controversial since he argued that former Stasi members should be integrated into the police force and the Interior Ministry to avoid their becoming a potential terrorist threat .
26 The theory was first put forward by H R Buchanan in his Manual of Psychometry in 1889 , when he argued that all objects contain the history of the world because they are connected to the Akashic Chronicles .
27 In this book he argued that all life should be a preparation for dying .
28 He argued that sociological explanations of action should begin with ‘ the observation and theoretical interpretation of the subjective ‘ states of minds ’ of actors ' .
29 He argued that rational people drawing up a just social contract would only be willing to grant governments the power to punish to the extent that was necessary to protect themselves from the crimes of others .
30 In addition , he argued that legalizing adoption was against the teaching of ‘ the church ’ .
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