Example sentences of "she [vb mod] [adv] [vb infin] the [noun] " in BNC.

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1 Nevertheless , though she may not recognise the name it goes by from any catalogue of thou-shalt-nots , our Riva knows an abomination when she sees one .
2 If the salesperson is unsuccessful at this stage , then he or she may not have the opportunity of selling to the firm again until the next model change ( and even then it is difficult trying to dislodge established suppliers ) .
3 He or she may even know the number of consultants within a particular firm , how it has been performing , what are its key issues , how it has grown over the past year and generally what it is doing and how successfully .
4 She may also mobilize the hand , if it is tense and clenched .
5 She may also cancel the arrangement whenever she wishes .
6 Her role may be restricted to advising the carers on how to treat the patient , and she may only visit the family once .
7 Because her expectations were realistic , she accepts without rancour the fact that she must either do the work herself or employ someone to do it for her .
8 She had agreed to this dinner to try to find out the truth , and she must n't allow the attraction she felt for him to cloud that .
9 She must n't let the sense of happiness grow and blossom just because she had met him .
10 He was magnificent , but she must n't let the surge of unexpected excitement running through her blind her to the danger he could be to Dana .
11 I thought she must not like the idea of my going on the plane with her , then coming home every year laden with presents .
12 Annie asked , looking briefly into his eyes and reminding herself that she must not prolong the conversation .
13 Above all , Alida Thorne said to herself , she must not receive the impression of neglect .
14 She must also show the relationships of such a scale to the claims for detachment made within particular cultural conventions .
15 She must go to sleep next to her murdered lover , talking of breakfast , and she must then persuade the Cook to prepare the body for eating .
16 Her sire is Glint Of Gold , so she should not mind the rain that has eased the Newmarket going .
17 Then her hands would grow hot and she would pause , wipe them with a moist cloth so that she should not smear the finespun white cotton thread as she worked , and her thoughts of Tommaso would return ; they were very sweet to her , often enough , though when her daydreaming grew extravagant she would fall again into hopelessness , and fear that none of it might ever come true .
18 If the wife was a purchaser for money , she would insist on the husband conveying as " beneficial owner " , and there seems no good reason therefore why she should not receive the benefit of these implied covenants when taking a conveyance of the matrimonial home from the husband by order of the court or by way of final agreement between them .
19 Whilst the husband and wife as owners of the legal estate can make a conveyance or transfer as trustees to the wife alone as discussed in the previous section , there seems no good reason , when the husband conveys or releases his beneficial interest to the wife , why she should not receive the benefit of the " beneficial owner " covenants ( see Chapter 3 ) .
20 And if Marian and the outlaws had already met there was no reason why she should not use the highway and move as fast as they .
21 He was all soft and scummy inside , and greenish , like his eyes , and she stood up and pulled the two halves of his torn torso together like a shirt she was going to button up so she should not see the spilling of his innards .
22 Sir Gregory knew that was out of the question , but it was also essential that she should not see the entrance to the tunnel .
23 He turned towards the stove so that she should n't see the flush of shame and dismay that he had let slip Berowne 's name .
24 What was happening to her ? she wondered hazily ; after this afternoon she should surely loathe the man more than ever .
25 Julia felt she might not make the end of the week if this went on .
26 If he did , then he was aware of the situation of risk and , it is suggested , should be acquitted only if his failure to consider that she might not appreciate the nature of the act was reasonable , bearing in mind his own capacities .
27 The same must be true of a situation in which the defendant pleads honest belief in consent on the ground that the victim permitted penetration although the defendant was aware that she might not understand the nature of the act .
28 A further situation might arise , however , in which the defendant alleges belief in consent on the basis of the victim 's consent to penetration but where it did not occur to him that she might not understand the nature of the act , although the risk of this was quite obvious .
29 She might not volunteer the truth all the time , but ask her and you got a straight answer .
30 She might not like the situation , but she was n't about to take the line of least resistance .
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