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

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1 He then said that he now had confirmation from the police and that I qualified for a transfer and would receive an offer for Govan ( where my dad is ) within a week .
2 He then said that in order to do so he needed 150 experienced men .
3 But he then said that he and his friends did n't like the drift of my article at all , and for the sake of my health I would be well advised to leave the subject alone .
4 He then said that they did n't want an understanding with the United States , because they know that this was impossible ( sic ) .
5 He then said that his study would be concerned primarily with those users who :
6 He then said that that system is created by the National Union of Public Employees and the Confederation of Health Service Employees .
7 He then said that about three quarters of all international passengers will end up at King 's Cross .
8 He then said that the program would not have been patentable had it been stored on a floppy disk .
9 ‘ Anyway , he then insisted that I went with him to a trade show in San Francisco .
10 He then ordered that the house be destroyed .
11 He then admits that the result of any conflict , though it may be intelligible , may not necessarily imply any progress .
12 However , he then says that he has continued the work of John XXIII with such fidelity that , ‘ if anything , the criticism that I lack initiatives of my own would be nearer the mark ’ ( Notizario , 13 , pp. 15–16 ) .
13 He then says that Caesar does n't seem to let his emotions speak more than his reason , but ( this is the next six or seven lines ) when ambitious young people are starting out , at the bottom of the heap , they are humble and look up with awe , but once they have made it to the top , they scorn all those below them , who have helped them to get there .
14 He then requested that it be registered in the books of parliament ; to which regent and parliament obligingly consented .
15 But he then recalled that even tiny amounts of certain high polymers , like polyoxyethylene , dissolve in water to make it very slippery indeed .
16 Gratified by his sister 's distress , he then whispered that he had a dark secret to tell them : the place was haunted .
17 But he then realised that the Sun is rotating .
18 He then realised that he had already seen his son some distance from the door and that his conviction that it was him had been totally irrational .
19 Erm and he then saw that the political authority of the landlords as the backbone of all the other systems of authority .
20 He then states that he would rather not exist than live to have to serve and be in awe of a man no better than himself .
21 He then announced that the courts had found me innocent and therefore I would shortly be released .
22 He then feels that , in all fairness , he must give some guidance on the loose ends , even at the last moment .
23 Having pointed out the peculiarity and arbitrariness of this notion he then assumes that , in other systems , the relation of man to his material environment is visualized differently .
24 He then assumes that for each country the rate of growth of aggregate demand or nominal spending has followed a very simple process ; that is , where is the rate of growth of the ith country 's nominal spending , is the mean value of over the whole period , and is the deviation of from its mean .
25 He then asserted that it was greater to exist than not to exist .
26 He then suggests that the former can either directly create the conditions for the reproduction of the relations of production , presumably by quelling any sign of working class insubordination ( i.e. , a feature of economic practice depends upon political practice ) , or they can do so indirectly , by establishing a situation in which ideological state apparatuses can do their work ( i.e. , in which ideological practice determines economic practice ) .
27 Similarly , the earlier threat of Junius contains an implicit defence of monarchy : a revolution may overthrow the Hanoverians , Junius had threatened , but he then implied that the Hanoverians would be replaced , not by Jacobinism , but by a more benevolent , or weaker , monarchy .
28 He then argues that ‘ it is not sufficient ( for me ) to tell the conference that there will be no return to mass picketing ’ .
29 He then declared that he and those with him on the platform had pledged themselves to pay no fines and refused to be bound over , ‘ and we have authorised no one to pay these fines for us .
30 He then writes that in the early part of 821/early 1418 , Molla Fenari appointed his younger son , Sinan al-Din Yusuf Bali Celebi ( Yusuf Bali ) , as naib for the kadilik of Bursa and with his elder son , Muhyi " l-Din Muhammad Shah Celebi ( Mehmed Sah Fenari ) , went directly to Egypt where he spent Ramadan at the Zayniyya medrese and awaited the arrival of Seyh Zeyneddin , with whom he subsequently made the pilgrimage in 822 , departing from , and returning to , Jerusalem .
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