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

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1 He believed that a place which respected horseflesh would not be wholly comfortless and as he had horses this applied to him .
2 In the same interview with the two journalists , Wilson made the further point that he believed that a faction in DI5 had pursued a vendetta against himself and his close colleagues .
3 He believed that the company would soon have a network of debt surveillance collectors throughout Europe .
4 The Secretary of State was so ignorant that he believed that the Bill applied to Scotland .
5 Like Plato , he believed that the concepts of time and the universe were inseparable , each being essential to the other .
6 He believed that the ray-vibrations invoked to explain light and radiant heat might happen in the lines of force ( which he seemed to have almost demonstrated experimentally ) rather than in the hypothetical ether .
7 He believed that the treaty could be endorsed by the United Nations so that in the final instance all major powers would be committed to respect Afghan neutrality and non-alignment .
8 He believed that the memory of every experience in our lives is imprinted somewhere in our body tissues , mostly in our muscles , and we can recover those memories by using a series of physical movements , positions and methods of breathing which will restimulate experiences of pain and distress .
9 He believed that the conflict of interest between capital and labour , which involves one group gaining at the expense of the other , could not be resolved within the framework of a capitalist economy .
10 He believed that the threat was temporary and held that , if nobles took a broad view , their prospects were good , but he also sensed the extreme urgency of the state 's need to foster entrepreneurial activity .
11 When Lenin heard about this , he believed that the revolution in the West was going to succeed after all .
12 He believed that the activities of trade unions should be restricted to the sphere of welfare , but he strongly supported the provision of education for working men and women , establishing a works library in 1848 , a new School of Science and Art in Oldham in 1865 , and a works school in 1866 .
13 Andrew Hugh Smith , chairman of the exchange , said he believed that the clearing house ‘ will involve market users more directly in the development of settlement systems and so enable the UK to achieve the rapid development of a paperless settlement , payments and registration system for domestic equities .
14 He believed that the nationalization of coal was a blessing both for Durham and for the Church in Durham .
15 A typical Londoner through and through , he believed that the aims of the N.D.D.S. were in conflict with those of the R.A.D.D. Following the demise of the N.D.D.S. , he played no part in the formation of the British Deaf and Dumb Association , concentrating instead on improving the services and influence of the R.A.D.D. throughout London and nearby towns .
16 A Garda spokesman said he believed that the drugs had originated in north Africa and had been brought ashore from a yacht .
17 The thought of the Marlborough boys ‘ discovering ’ him gave him obvious pleasure ; and whether or not he believed that the curriculum should include modern literature ( as Auden was later to say that it should not ) , he certainly believed , with his own youthful experience in mind , that the young should be enabled to explore new fields in the arts for themselves .
18 He believed that the PASOK movement could make a real contribution to European as well as Greek politics , but after serving as education minister in Papandreou 's second administration ( when he tried to reintroduce classical Greek into the school curriculum ) , he left to found his own ill-starred party , the Greek Radical Movement .
19 He believed that the success of his work depended upon personal anonymity and public non-disclosure .
20 He believed that the perfume of plants held magical forces and plant spirits whose power would help him concoct the elixir of life .
21 Not that he believed that the firing he had heard had been caused by the French .
22 He believed that the waters of self-expression were dangerous arid decidedly murky and that children could readily be influenced by chance currents and flounder !
23 He believed that the surface of the earth changed gradually over long periods of time , and saw that such changes would have an effect not only upon the physical environment to which living things were exposed , but upon the possibility of migration to new locations .
24 Four minutes later he claimed a second near Hal Far , but did not see it crash and had no witness , although he believed that the pilot of this aircraft also baled out .
25 He believed that the government had lost credibility , first by denying that any recession ever existed , then by claiming it was only minor , then by claiming that though perhaps it was severe the recovery was just around the corner .
26 He believed that the creatures inside the Grail Castle must not breed , for it was not to be thought of that the nightmare perpetuated by the sorcerers should be passed on .
27 He believed that the teachings of Christ gather together the wisdom of the ages into one source , and present it for the ‘ uneducated ’ along with a few miracles in order to win their attention and support ( much as the outlaw in the Western uses his gun in order to win an audience in a crowded saloon bar ) .
28 In his speech to the rally Lal indicated that he was remaining within the Janata Dal , but was prepared to leave if he believed that the party was departing from its principles .
29 He believed that the sexuality of man , unlike any other animal , developed in two waves and this could explain man 's susceptibility to neuroses .
30 And he does n't like my form of questioning , as when I asked him if he believed that the gates of heaven could only be opened by gold and silver keys ?
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