Example sentences of "but i believe [conj] the " in BNC.

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1 I did not want that , but I believed that the top salary awards were so out of line with what we were proposing in the rest of the public sector that in the real world of industrial relations it made my job infinitely more difficult .
2 It is a question with which promoters and television are constantly grappling , but I believe that the answer is self-evident .
3 It takes time to understand this need , but I believe that the more we write , the more fully we grasp why it is we want to , have to .
4 ‘ It 's been said that I am a much improved player this season ’ , Hamilton says , ‘ but I believe that the difference is merely that I am that much more confident .
5 ‘ I ca n't prove it ’ , he says , ‘ but I believe that the activities of George Soros helped to push the Clinton administration into taking effective steps to assist Russian science ’ .
6 I will not attempt to summarise the close reasoning of that part of the judgment under appeal which explains the reasons why , but for the authority of Reg. v. Director of Serious Fraud Office , Ex parte Saunders , 138 N.L.J. 243 , the Divisional Court would , in company with Mr. Russell Q.C. , have preferred the first of the grounds of relief , but I believe that the following quotations [ 1992 ] 1 All E.R.
7 I would respectfully agree with his description , in relation to dishonest actions , of appropriation as involving an act by way of adverse interference with or usurpation of the owner 's rights , but I believe that the less aggressive definition of appropriation which I have put forward fits the word as used in an honest sense in section 2(1) as well as elsewhere in the Act .
8 But I believe that the decisions made to go on the trips this autumn have been good ones .
9 But I believe that the decisions made to go on the trips this autumn have been good ones .
10 I have bo proof , but I believe that the heartening increase in our total reflects , at least in part , a growing awareness in this centre of mounted successful commerce that the modest , hectic and rather untidy operation mounted each May in the portico of our Church , by ordinary members , represents a dimension which even those Edmund Burke described as ‘ sophisters , economists and calculators ’ had to take into account .
11 But I believe that the councillor er is somewhat cynical in the what that he has put this forward .
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