Example sentences of "[adv] she have [vb pp] [adv prt] [prep] " in BNC.

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1 So she had gone out with someone .
2 It was all new to her , but the Indian seemed to know what he was talking about , and so she had gone along with him .
3 So she had grown up in a cold , almost emotionally empty vacuum .
4 So she 's come up with a way of trying to protect animals in Gloucestershire , Worcestershire and Herefordshire .
5 When eventually she had arrived back at Briar Cottage , there had been no concealing her distress from Bess Halidon .
6 Eventually she had found out about it in the worst possible way .
7 Now she had pulled up outside the village shop and was yelling to them to bring her out an ice-cream .
8 Well she did work full time in London , but she said that was to much for her so she 's , she did n't work at all , now she 's gone back to work three days a week in Orpington I think .
9 Well last time we , last time he came with us , I said there 's one thing I just want to ask you a favour , that 's enough , she 's as happy as harry now she 's faced up to the fact , that er , he was not good because he did n't love her any way , she loved him .
10 Well she 'd gone out through the door and the wind took her down the bloody street !
11 And erm well she 's gone down from what ?
12 But he could not bring himself to do it , especially not now , after Simon had revealed how she had spoken up for him .
13 He switched the subject just as he had snapped his fingers to remind her of how she had switched off after Seville .
14 They sat around one end of the work table , which now seemed vast and empty , and Alina Peterson explained how she 'd walked down to the village to look around and , where it seemed appropriate , to introduce herself .
15 I actually have at the back which I will show in a minute , a costume that was worn by a woman in the eighteen-forties , and it shows how she has kept up with the fashion ; it is a fairly fashionable dress , but it is adapted for real life , for day to day life , for for the life of an ordinary middle class woman who had perhaps one or two servants , but had to do the running of the household herself .
16 Twice she has got out of her room at night , as you know .
17 And then she had lain down in the dark , naked but for her flimsy shawl , the window open to let in the night , and waited .
18 Then she had found out about the baby and realised the truth — that they had done more than draw comfort from each other as mere friends .
19 She could n't really remember anything , only that she had been knitting and then she had woken up in this bed with her nosy , bossy sister sitting beside her .
20 Since then she has gone back to Killarney .
21 Earlier she had come down in this lift with Steve and now she was going up with the last person on earth she could have envisaged .
22 Was that why she had moved out of the Wilson family home ?
23 She had known Sam all her life and though he was a worthy and hard-working man , she knew why she had held back from agreeing to marry him .
24 She had forgotten why she had come down to the garden in the first place .
25 Cara nodded , and elatedly went on to tell them that she had heard , only that morning when she 'd looked in at her office to check her post before driving up to Cheltenham , that she 'd pulled off an interview with none other than Vendelin Gajdusek .
26 She had seen Madge that morning when she had gone round with the news about the kiosk .
27 During the short time their marriage had lasted , there had been so many times when she had given in to Julius 's forceful demands , just to keep the peace .
28 ‘ You look tired , dear , ’ said Doris Smythe when she had hobbled up to her door and let Linda in before carefully locking it again once Linda was standing in her dark hallway .
29 She remembered that fated evening when she had come back from Wimbledon after seeing Hindley Foster .
30 Ever since that ghastly winter 's night when she had come back from Wimbledon and said she was pregnant .
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