Example sentences of "he believe [art] [adj] [noun] " in BNC.

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1 ‘ It was evident to me that he believed a certain act of self-denial was required of him .
2 The Middle East situation was full of menace and he believed a pre-emptive strike by the USA was possible .
3 He believed a truer picture of the company 's performance was given by earnings figures calculated on a current-cost basis , which rose by just 8 per cent to £3.1 billion on turnover which fell by more than £1 billion to £73 billion .
4 Secondly , he believed an essential condition of the triumph of the proletariat was that it be guided by Marxism .
5 Now Dr Winfield — and I have ratified this — made 127 sorties ; he could not have enjoyed his period at the Institute very much because he never seemed to he there , But he would come on a station with some project he wanted to fully research and he believed the only way to fully research these things was to " try them out on the dog " .
6 Mr Maginess added he believed the only answer was to tighten security measures and provide a stable political situation where problems could be solved .
7 There was some feeling among his staff that AEAs corporate strategy of ‘ All sticking together ’ had been undermined by the latest announcement but he believed the best way forward was in maintaining standards of service and keeping customers .
8 A 2pc cut in base rates coinciding with the Chancellor 's Autumn Statement next week has been widely anticipated and Mr Bootle said he believed the downward trend would continue through to next year and stabilise at 5pc .
9 Still suffused with a sense of equality to the challenge that confronted him , he slipped deftly into the image he believed the other man would have of him .
10 Lieutenant Colonel Bob Stewart , Cheshires ' Commanding Officer , said in a statement read at the inquest that he believed the fatal shot may have been fired by either a Moslem or Croat gunman acting on his own initiative .
11 He spoke without conviction , as if he believed the last phrase was something he was obliged to say rather than genuinely believed .
12 Mr Major said he believed the constitutional issue ‘ transcended ’ the election .
13 The former Lord Chancellor , Lord Hailsham , said he believed the scientific community to be a responsible one .
14 He believes the best way to bring unemployment down is through helping industry and provided measures to help exporters , what he termed entrepreneurs and small businessmen .
15 He believes the small businessman invests his whole life in a company and risks losing it all .
16 He believes the new councils should exist to provide a service ‘ not to run an empire ’ .
17 Services and Development Manager at the J R , Richard Sunley , says while there 's no guarantee an incident of the kind that occurred in Carshalton wo n't happen in Oxford , he believes the new security system will play a significant role .
18 Once it is made clear that the judge makes new law in these circumstances , as conventionalism insists , then it seems plausible that he should choose the rule he believes the actual legislature then in power would choose , or , failing that , the rule he believes best represents the will of the people as a whole .
19 He believes the First Division is so volatile that anything may yet be possible .
20 Although he believes the Labour vote is firmer than that of the Conservatives , the cautious conclusion in his camp is that , in the range of possibilities , a Labour majority government has a slight edge over Labour as the largest party in a hung parliament .
21 But , East Antrim MP Roy Beggs , says he believes the Irish Government do not want to investigate because the case could embarrass senior political figures .
22 He believes the Irish Government has no intention of doing anything about Articles 2 and 3 .
23 However , he believes the increased market for green products , and the premium price people are willing to pay , makes the conversion commercially viable — and will help farmers to break the stranglehold of the powerful agrochemical companies .
24 Reuters ' managing director of Instinet UK , Bryan Cavill , agrees that bigger and more creative deals need the human touch , but he believes the lower cost , speed and transparency of automated trading will in time capture a good chunk of the market .
25 He believes the extended use of paramedics will be a major step forward .
26 By the time he retired from his post eight years later 8,000 new jobs had been created and he believes the artistic opportunities presented by Theatr Clwyd played its part .
27 Unix must be leveraged into a volume player attractive to ISVs and he believes the generic Unix brand UI recently proposed is part of the answer ( UX No 415 ) .
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