Example sentences of "[adj] [subord] she did n't " in BNC.

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1 She went down Wednesday she had to go late because the builder does n't come very early so she did n't go to B and Q until the afternoon , and she was going around , or Do-it-all , one of them , she was going around looking around and then as soon as she looked out it was half past five !
2 A condition to be rectified as quickly as possible if she did n't want to be labelled a freak , or worse .
3 Well sorry if she did n't wear any at all eh dear , eh ?
4 But I suppose she had pretended to be ill because she did n't want to be at the funeral .
5 It is true that Rigoberta Menchu sympathises with the aims of the EGP , which are an end to the repression of the Mayan people — indeed it would be extraordinary if she did n't .
6 Rory suspected she looked so good because she did n't live here any more ; she lived in London , and Aunt Ilsa had got her a job working for a television company .
7 It did n't really hurt as long as she did n't get his face .
8 He did n't care as long as she did n't get caught and ask him to pay the fine .
9 He thought he 'd like to see her again as long as she did n't whinge too much about sexism .
10 As long as she did n't get too serious it was all right .
11 As long as she did n't drink .
12 What she meant , she told herself , was that no living creature would choose to be a pet , and nothing would opt for imprisonment , and when she went home she 'd feel trapped and , if she did n't know it was happening , she 'd rather be shot — as long as she did n't see the bullet coming .
13 Of course she was safe as long as she did n't weaken .
14 No sisters until mother got married again , and me sister as I call her now , she 's me of course my half sister , Jessie , she was born I 'd be about seventeen cos she did n't get married till after the First World War , remarried me step-father was in the forces and he fought , he actually fought in the Boer War so he was a a soldier in the Boer War and in what we call the Great War , nineteen fourteen to nineteen eighteen , but er I had a misfortune to lose the brother next to me , Frank , which he had what was common in those days tubercular trouble , tubercular tuberculosis affected the bowels , see he died in , on August the fourth nineteen eighteen in the old infirmary that now classed as the Manor Hospital , but that was the old infirmary cos we there was no widow 's pension in those days , our mother was a bridle stitcher and she used to do have an old fashioned clamp , have you ever seen the clamps that are leather , th tha they held them , the leather , she used to stitch bridles at home , we used to help her with waxing the threads have a leather apron and a bit of wax and pull the wax over the thread , and then roll it round till it was strong enough to thread it , we used to make the threads for her to er stitch the bridles .
15 He looked hurt when she did n't join him , his emotions transparent as a child 's .
16 It is what they expect from Robyn Penrose , and even the rugby-playing boys in the back row would be mildly disappointed if she did n't produce this kind of observation from time to time .
17 Gina got nastier and nastier when she did n't have money ; she hit him much more than before .
18 Her mother was upset as she did n't approve of Gerry .
19 Then , bugger I down dead if she did n't get me .
20 ‘ Yes , she would , ’ said Constance , ‘ She might feel discriminatory if she did n't . ’
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