Example sentences of "[conj] she have " in BNC.

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1 She looked the same as usual ; untidy , a hole in her coat where she 'd caught it on a hook in the yard .
2 And squatting in what little shelter there was beside the door , just where she 'd expected him , Farquhar Neas .
3 No matter how careful I was , Dawn soon had raw patches of skin where she 'd pulled out her feathers .
4 She mentioned a conference at Lancaster University , where she 'd given a talk called ‘ Bringing Spirituality into Organizations ’ .
5 Nothing of her true nature , not even — and here Pavel had been holding his breath at the back of the Border Control 's interrogation room — where she 'd been living for the past two years .
6 Finally she returned to the information desk where she 'd first encountered him the previous day , and found a pretty young woman sitting there stacking up guide books on Dublin .
7 Donna had been rummaging beneath the bed upstairs , where she 'd pulled out both of the metal cases .
8 ‘ You said you had no idea where she 'd gone . ’
9 Loops of wiring and cable ran overhead , loosely tacked at intervals to the unpainted ceiling ; it was the kind of Who cares , no-one 'll see it protocol that had applied behind the scenes in the shopping mall where she 'd landed her first Saturday job .
10 From here she 'd get to know those whom Christine had known , perhaps find out where she 'd lived ; enter her skin , almost as if Christine were to walk again while Lucy became the ghost .
11 when he 'd hidden her and covered her over , he set out to find where she 'd lived .
12 You called your wife a tart , which is your business and hers , but you also said that if you 'd known where she 'd gone you would have caught her at it .
13 She looked towards the bag , where she 'd lovingly wrapped the two priceless items , believing them to be precious — but only because they 'd belonged to her beloved father .
14 Then she had made her way swiftly across the hotel lobby and out into the car park where she 'd left her little Mini .
15 Shannon named the television station where she 'd worked before turning freelance , and the other woman pursed her lips thoughtfully .
16 Then , obeying an impulse she barely understood , she took the silver medallion out of the inner pocket of her bag , where she 'd zipped it for safekeeping , and fastened the chain round her neck .
17 ‘ Did n't you say she wants to take up where she 'd left off ? ’
18 ‘ Have you any idea where she 'd been before she phoned ? ’
19 Paul 's ring was on the bedside cabinet , where she 'd placed it , and her handbag …
20 Inside it was cool and restful , with honey-coloured stone tiles covering a huge entrance hall , where she 'd promptly dropped her suitcase and flight-bag and made a dive for the kitchen and the fridge to quench her raging thirst .
21 I read it through , then crossed out where she had written ‘ Miss ’ at the top and wrote ‘ Dr ’ instead .
22 Jay gripped , burrowed her head in Lucy 's belly : here so safe and wanted inside her beloved Jeremy had grown ; her brow nudged Lucy 's breasts , where Jeremy had sucked himself full and strong , where she had found a contentment warm as summer wind across white sands ; here she had swum easy as a seal , crystal seas halcyon over her head .
23 Jay 's rainbow wings fluttered around a sun-sparkling river that had become her life , where she had been moping by an old canal full of dead shopping trolleys for years .
24 At seven p.m. she entered the wine bar where she had arranged to rendezvous .
25 To comfort her desolation and guilt Rachel had told her about the Mongolian desert , where she had been as a little girl , hardly older than Maggie was now , to look for dragons , which she called dinosaurs , and where years later Russian palaeontologists had found the great fossil eggs in which the sleeping baby dinosaurs could still be seen .
26 She opened her eyes and was aware of being in her mother 's bed , where she had not been for over ten years .
27 After graduating from Bristol University , where she had been President of the Students ' Union , Sue joined the Thomson Organisation as a trainee reporter on the Western Mail and South Wales Echo in Cardiff .
28 She is also a great letter-writer , a hangover no doubt from years at boarding school , where she had to write to both parents every week .
29 He got half-way down the corridor and realized in irritation that he had no idea where she had been given an office .
30 She was totally unsuited to anything where she had to organize herself .
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