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

  Next page
No Sentence
1 Oh Jesus , Sam , she was everybody 's Aunt Jemima , if she 'd turned up with her hair in a bun and flour on her apron she could n't have made them love her more , Jesus , Sam , we 're not guilty .
2 That cup , which she 'd carried round with her for years , touched , held — it had come from Fincara , out of those cold white hands !
3 She had run off with her lover to a new country which was strange and beautiful and dangerous .
4 She had travelled over with her boyfriend and did n't know the system .
5 So she had gone out with someone .
6 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 .
7 The Palmer & Pearson file she had brought up with her was forgotten as she swung round and headed for the door .
8 She told me that her parents had been kind and loving and that , when her two younger brothers were born after the war , she had got on with them quite well apart from the normal childish disagreements .
9 So everything 's there , printing presses repro separation houses , sheet film , computer set up and Apple Macs and everything is there , it 's actually a very impressive set up erm , the Queen Margaret 's course , I 'm slightly dubious about I once had a colleague I 'm going back a decade who had been employed on the basis of doing the communications course at Queen Margaret I think , and it turned out that it was n't communications as we understood it , it was n't our sort of communications P R newspapers and things like that , it was communications on a much broader , broader front so it did n't actually fit in to the world of P R and what happened was I then had to sit down and train this woman from scratch and get rid of a lot of the preconceived notions that she had come in with she had brought from Queen Margaret 's College .
10 Pound had known Phyllis Bottome between 1905 and 1907 , when they were fellow students at the University of Pennsylvania , and it 's not clear whether it is that early association , or a period later when she had caught up with him in London , that Phyllis Bottome had in mind when she wrote of how Pound tried to transform her as a writer from a talented amateur into a professional :
11 ‘ For this same reason once she had caught up with her husband ( and been sent quickly home as being very undutiful and immoral travelling about alone and not remaining in her place at home against his return ) it would have been inconceivable for her to go to the police .
12 But as they continued down the hill to Dingle and along the road that curved round the harbour to Ballingolin , she was even more bewildered to hear him reciting family history to her — history she had taken in with her mother 's milk and knew by heart .
13 She had lain down with her love — the enemy — and now she did n't know what was to become of her .
14 Then she picked up the tall glass she had carried down with her , and which was now empty , walked sedately to the water 's edge , filled it with ice-cold water and returned to see that he had not shifted .
15 Erm Mrs erm Eileen , one of our elderlies , she 's tied up with her husband who 's in hospital .
16 ‘ I 'm Norma , Dana 's flatmate , but she 's not here ; she 's gone off with her lover-boy — I do n't know where . ’
17 she 's got problems she 's split up with her boyfriend ,
18 talking to one of these receptionists today and she says erm she 's been trying to get a bit of erm , she 's split up with her husband , trying to get , a bit of extra money together , you know , to be , she 's got her own house like , buying her own house and all this and that she 's fell into a bloody modelling job and saying get yourself a passport and er on about sending her off to either the South of France or Kenya
19 And she 's come up with you know , Haweswell she likes best , she was most impressed with .
  Next page