Example sentences of "[that] she have [vb pp] in " in BNC.

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1 She replied that she had lived in a small group of about 10 people : she indicated the number by holding up both hands with the fingers spread .
2 It seemed to her now that she had lived in a dream .
3 She has been the guardian of this wishing tree in the English churchyard since anyone alive can remember , though before that , the rumour was that she had lived in a wild state , before the islands were properly civilised .
4 Elizabeth reported that she had heard in such a place : ‘ Long time , no see , old boy , what 's your poison ? ’
5 Dr Marshall , who as a vegan eats no animal products , agreed that she had eaten in her room , but said that she did no cooking .
6 She noticed the eight-pointed-compass shape in the stained-glass window , beneath which Marc was standing , that she had observed in mosaic on the floor of the entrance hall .
7 The chair was slipping , although its first speed had been checked by the fact that she had fallen in front of the wheels .
8 It seems that she had fallen in love with him but she " did n't know where I was at all " with him ; he would be most affectionate towards her and then , for no apparent reason , seemed to avoid her for protracted periods .
9 After Flavia had stated , baldly , that she had fallen in love with someone , Therese gave her a look .
10 Eventually she told him that she had fallen in love with a man who was already married and her conscience was greatly troubled .
11 But Shelley admitted that she had fallen in love with his music , which made it easier to like everything else Spanish .
12 The panel ruled that she had engaged in ‘ sub-standard care ’ .
13 The Comédie Française did not impress her either , for it seemed to her a collection of posturing gabbling shadows , mocking at plays that she had studied in tranquillity and silence : the celebrated mirrors of Versailles were all spotty , Notre-Dame looked at her as though it had two spires missing from on top , and the famous intellectual cafés were full of old men and tourists .
14 But she looked down through the glass skylight and recognised in Maggie 's cropped hair and long white body the same contours that she had seen in that other virgin warrior whom she had inspired into battle .
15 She later confessed that she had seen in him not a budding genius , but only a ‘ little man ’ .
16 It went pop , and Signe leaned forward into the candlelight so that all the customers could see her , and sipped at the champagne and narrowed her eyes at me in a gesture of passion that she had seen in some bad film .
17 The recurring line of Sybil 's poem came back to Melissa 's mind , the poem about dead flowers that she had written in memory of a beautiful girl , savagely cut down .
18 Hewas so considerate when she lost the baby a year later , overlooking that she had failed in giving him what the nurse reluctantly told her would have been a son .
19 And after his death it seemed to her that she had walked in darkness like an automaton through a deep and narrow canyon of grief in which all her energies , all her physical strength , had been husbanded to get through each day .
20 She replied : ‘ Yes thank you , ’ although some reporters said that she had spoken in a ‘ soulful way ’ and appeared quite miserable .
21 ‘ Of course you do , ’ Alyssia replied , feeling slightly better now that she had succeeded in explaining away some of the astrologer 's words .
22 ‘ What do you want ? ’ she asked mutinously , deliriously thankful that she had succeeded in not succumbing to the urge to blub her eyes out when she had dashed out of the living-room .
23 They swore that they had turned her down at first , but that she had behaved in such a bold manner — sitting on their laps , kissing them and fingering her body — that they could not hold back any longer .
24 She was still wearing the thin cotton dress that she 'd worn in the prison hospital , but now there was a shawl around her shoulders as well .
25 She stood staring after his lithe figure , gripped by the same sense of anguish and loss that she 'd felt in the Piazzale Roma .
26 He could n't help thinking of something that she 'd said in all seriousness when they 'd left the apartment building behind and a lack of any interest from a passing night patrol on the motorway had told him that no , the police did n't seem to be keeping an active watch for his car ; she 'd looked at him and she 'd said , Promise me , Peter .
27 It was bad enough that she 'd fallen in love with the cold , glacial man she already knew him to be — if she were to suddenly discover a tender , humane element to his character , heaven help her .
28 So I , I , I think that er one of the , the comforting things which er I c I can see is that she has grown in self confidence , not cockiness , self confidence .
29 ‘ I believe the girl lives locally and that she has kept in touch with her father . ’
30 He 's wonderful ! ’ she said and looked at the counsellor like someone confessing to her girlfriend that she has fallen in love .
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