Example sentences of "[pron] [modal v] [adv] [verb] her " in BNC.

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1 I 'll just sound her heart again before we go . ’
2 I 'll just call her ‘ gorgeous ’ ’ That earned him a laugh .
3 I 'll probably see her later . ’
4 ‘ Meg ! ’ said she — and I 'll always remember her words — ‘ Meg !
5 She was obviously flustered and I 'll never forget her concerned eyes staring into mine .
6 I could n't bear her judgements , I did n't agree , I do n't agree , with her values .
7 I could n't bear her look of hurt expectancy any more , so I tore myself away from her face and walked off .
8 I could n't tell her mine was n't a route she 'd stand much chance of following .
9 But I gave her a cold stare and fluffed my fur out ; I could n't have her thinking I was a pushover .
10 I could n't believe her reaction , she was totally stupefied .
11 I could n't see her face but I knew she was older than I was .
12 I could n't see her face very clearly now , but could sense how she 'd withdrawn from me .
13 Although I could n't see her face properly , her tongue was painting my image by numbers .
14 She was lying almost abeam of us , and at first I could n't see her hull , but only a sort of thickening of the mist that turned out to be her mast .
15 I could not bear her loss .
16 I could not understand her ideas but I had a feeling she might be right .
17 Sharon , that 's it , I could not get her name last night .
18 It was a long while before I could even change her nappy , and putting clothes on , you had to disconnect all the wires , put the clothes on and put them all back .
19 I could never see her thick black tuft of pubic hair without longing to go with my father into that dark Moravian pine forest , stretching all the way from the Carpathians , which surrounded our home .
20 I suffered with her that evening , right through every moment , and when I went to bed at around midnight I could still hear her crying into her pillow — not a sound that sends a mother peacefully to sleep .
21 I could still hear her voice , the way she had said , ‘ You do n't approve , do you ? ’
22 When I reached my gate I could still see her grey shape at the door .
23 I could still see her eyes twinkling , hear her voice and her laughter like a gold thread sparkling through a tapestry of words .
24 Karen did , and I could quite understand her apprehension at the prospect of trying to maintain her rigid code of etiquette beneath the hot southern sun , in a festive holiday atmosphere , with both of us under the same roof twenty-four hours a day .
25 ‘ Oh — ’ I could almost hear her hiccup — ‘ it 's so good , darling , hearing you talking like that . ’
26 It was n't until we got to Redbridge Station that she thought — and I could almost hear her thinking — about the envelope and the fiver I 'd given her .
27 ‘ To say I would n't cash her cheque .
28 And I would n't leave her side .
29 I said seriously that I quite understood , and that I would n't hold her responsible if nothing happened .
30 ‘ Oh , ’ he said , at once , ‘ I would probably give her eight hours to quit . ’
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