Example sentences of "he [vb past] that [noun] " in BNC.
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1 | He made that noise that men who drink beer make , and wiped his mouth on the back of his wrist . |
2 | He made that sign of two fingers laid across two fingers . |
3 | Totally competent in his mind and lucid when he made that decision ? |
4 | He made that decision having listened to representations from hon. Members from Northern Ireland . |
5 | I 've gone clean off him — ever since he made that pact with Stalin and the ghastly Russians . ’ |
6 | trembling when he made that speech when he remember when he , remember when you , you were n't there , no you were n't there he was shaking like a leaf . |
7 | ‘ The Admiral was n't able to adduce anything new in evidence when he made that allegation . |
8 | Buy by god he made that woman come in there . |
9 | It can only be surmised that the Marquis was feeling pretty flush after a good win when he made that entry into his accounts , or the caddie was a highly favoured young man indeed , for four shillings at that time would have been over the top on the percentages that a caddie can expect from his round nowadays . |
10 | Because he made that statement when discussing the concentric spheres with which Aristotle had built the cosmos , he was evidently aware that authoritative world-pictures were not inviolable . |
11 | Of course after he made that statement he did n't realize that the London Region were gon na put a thousand pound in the bucket ! |
12 | Point of order , point of order , can Mr give any written evidence that the leader or Thamesdown Borough Council , in a meeting with him as leader of the Labour group on this council , that he made that statement ? |
13 | It 's gone to it 's got to a stage where he made that statement which he very very much means , he will never ever give them another album of his to market worldwide . |
14 | As you face the station , he lived that side you see and er there , the room where they used to entertain their friends was just the other side of the wall the booking office , you see , and er he was such a kind man , his name was Mr |
15 | He disclosed that electricity supplies to the compound had been turned off on Friday . |
16 | He realised that sucralose , the super-sweet sugar substitute T&L discovered in 1970 , could combine with Ruby and other new Staley products to make the group the dominant supplier of key ingredients for the booming diet food and drinks market . . ’ |
17 | He ruled that placing advertising inserts in Mail Newspapers 's publications without the company 's authority or consent ‘ constitutes or involves the making of a misrepresentation ’ . |
18 | He always noticed pools of oil and empty coke cans round the house if ever he passed that way . |
19 | He had been Prime Minister for nearly seven years in all when he produced that judgement . |
20 | He agreed that behaviour is not inherited , but what he called the ‘ adaptive information ’ of behaviour is inherited . |
21 | Morrison said later he felt Border had edged the ball , but he agreed that television replays appeared to show the ‘ woody ’ sound was probably the ball touching the stump . |
22 | Twenty nine thousand he reckons he sold that plot for . |
23 | Yes , yeah , he so he sold that house for |
24 | Well , those beautiful ones , those beautiful heads and things he did after he met that girl called Marie-Thérèse Walter I always think those are so beautiful . |
25 | Our Tory MP did jump off his LandRover to shake my hand and take one of my leaflets the other day , but as far as I could tell I was the only voter he met that morning . |
26 | Fury filled Lexandro ; and he stilled that fury . |
27 | He argued that nomination of Dora Maria Téllez for the current DN had not been accepted because a " traditional " directorate was needed " during this period of transition " . |
28 | Is this what counsel had in mind when he argued that consideration ( for example , relief from the penalty ) did not ‘ move from the promisee ? ’ |
29 | He argued that correctionalism ‘ systematically interferes with the capacity to empathise and thus comprehend the subject of enquiry ’ ( ibid. , p. 15 ) , and consequently increases ‘ the possibility of ‘ losing the phenomenon ’ — reducing it to that which it is not ’ ( ibid. p. 17 ) . |
30 | He argued that sociability , not ferociousness , is the greatest advantage in the struggle for survival . |