Example sentences of "[coord] she had [verb] " in BNC.

  Next page
No Sentence
1 Durkheim regards the criminal as someone who provides the community with an opportunity to reassert standards , which he or she had broken or opposed .
2 The killer must have been kneeling there , pistol at the ready , and as Francis emerged he or she had fired at a range of a few inches .
3 Professor Andrew Christie , convener of the taxation practices committee , said a good example of the programme was an architect or builder required to pay professional indemnity insurance long after he or she had retired .
4 The focus for method work was also provided by a student 's account of a lesson he or she had taught .
5 Either he had to go up to the Broken Hill Ironworks at Newcastle or she had to go down to Canberra to see some official about tariffs or quotas or immigration levels .
6 It was either that , or she had upset him .
7 Remember how you were concerned for his or her welfare , how you wanted to know if he or she had slept well , had eaten properly or was too cold or too hot ?
8 When a bather wanted more hot water , he or she had to shout over the noise of filling baths and protesting bathers and the Duchesse singing , and depending on how this eccen-tric woman felt , she would either top up the water from a source outside the cubicles or tell the bather his time was up .
9 Jessie cos he or she had got about a six foot long tree trunk in its mouth .
10 The group reflect what they see of the sufferer 's assets and defects ( never defects alone ) and he or she is helped towards the recognition that his or her previous life truly had become unmanageable and that he or she had tried desperately to control everything but was finally having to admit defeat and accept powerlessness .
11 Edouard came into her body with a feeling of shuddering release and the afternoon seemed to pass in a dream he had had , or she had had long before .
12 In addition the competent Minister was obliged to report to a parliamentary Board at least once every six months and to the G10 Commission , in the latter case with an account of the measures he or she had ordered .
13 Each bird seemed to know exactly which Minpin it was collecting , and each Minpin knew exactly which bird he or she had ordered for the morning .
14 Or she had used .
15 He or she had taken trouble over the arrangement of the facts and in getting in as much relevant information as possible .
16 that at the time of the loss or damage he or she had taken a room at the inn ; and
17 Held , dismissing the appeal , ( 1 ) that either the mother as donee of the power of attorney had possessed sufficient general understanding and capability to have satisfied herself regarding the purport and effect of the transfer document and had failed to do so , or she had lacked ordinary competence and capacity , in which case the defendant , as donor , could not be allowed to repudiate the transfer to an innocent third party ; that , if the case was that the defendant had failed to inform the donee of the power of attorney , that lack of care also precluded him from relying on her ignorance of the power ; and that , therefore , the fact that the mother had been tricked into signing the transfer document without reading it , was not sufficient to sustain a plea of non est factum ( post , p. 679A–F ) .
18 She had refused — even though it would have offered her an easy way out , and then circumstances had intervened and she had ended in the brothels in the notorious Monto .
19 Then they took her pay packet away ; they would give her only £5 and she had to go to her sisters and borrow money for her clothes and things .
20 We had to quickly change it back , but I only got one hook done up and she had to go holding one hand behind her back for the whole scene .
21 and she had to go home before it finished .
22 And she had to go out , but no Bernard now you forgot this bit here , she was , er house , the decorators were painting her house at three o'clock in the morning !
23 And er , Margot was behind the and they were painting her house and somebody fell and she had to go and give them artificial respiration or something did n't she ?
24 She had to go and she had to go and live with them he could n't get married without .
25 He was staring into the fire rather grimly and she had to take her courage firmly in hand .
26 That first night , after the shock had begun to abate , the vision of Benedict 's snarling features , the sound of molten rage in his voice , had come back to her again and again as she lay in her narrow cot bed , and she had wept .
27 They 'd shared a bed in Cumberland and she had comforted Gordon because nothing was quite right .
28 His generosity had got her out of gaol , and she had misled him about her sailing ability .
29 And she had answered , ‘ Oh , thank God .
30 And she had answered , ‘ The sooner the better .
  Next page