Example sentences of "[art] [noun sg] she have always [vb pp] " in BNC.

  Next page
No Sentence
1 It was an extension — or so I thought — of the tact she had always shown to me as a child that she did n't impose .
2 Then , giving in to the grief she 'd always kept bottled up , she buried her face against his shoulder and wept like a baby for the mother she had loved and lost .
3 By the time she gets to the den she 's always got another ready .
4 The independence she had always longed for would be hers at last .
5 The father she had always known would no longer have anything to do with her so she had eventually got a tiny room in a house in London which served as a hostel for single girls .
6 Next she considered the potatoes : in the past she had always cooked them in their skins , but recently it had been suggested that potato skins , if not carcinogenic , were yet harmful to the system , perforating the bowel or preventing it from absorbing the vital vitamins .
7 That was the secret she had always had to keep and had never confessed , not even to the Irish priests who stayed secretly at Roscarrock Hall .
8 Daylight brought the prosaic world back again , and a Dr Neil who was exactly like the man she had always known — it was as though she had imagined the improper advances of the night hours .
9 She should leave , return to England , fly back to the security of the life she had always known .
10 The way she 'd always known it , when you decided to throw a party , you threw a party ; you pushed back the furniture , you got all the food together yourself , you invited close friends who knew each other and for a while you let them invade your most private and personal space .
11 Constance grinned : Ludovico was exactly the way she had always imagined an Italian would be .
12 She would rebuild her defences and cope alone , the way she had always done .
13 That was the impression she had always wanted to give .
14 It was a melody she had always loved ; now , in this packed cellar , played by this golden-skinned Dane who both intrigued and irritated her , it took on an even deeper significance , melting her bones , flowing through her , drawing her senses towards the man who had been yesterday 's stranger .
15 But what he had left her was the key to untangling the harmony of dancing lights and that let her in to a place which like a child she had always stared at unknowing before .
16 Quickly Lisa jumped in , putting to him a question she had always wondered about .
17 During the course of the evening she met Princess Grace of Monaco , a woman she had always admired from afar .
18 Now he was filling their relationship with a seriousness she had always assumed it could not possibly contain .
19 He remembered their last jealous scene , all those years ago , in Paris , some time after her return from Poland , a journey she had always refused to talk about .
20 They 'd been married in a church she 'd always gone to as a child and afterwards there was a reception in the Mansfield Hotel , near by and convenient , and then she and Gordon had gone to Cumberland .
21 She wore an outfit she 'd always wanted to try but felt she was too plump to risk — a scarlet bustier and a black net skirt .
  Next page