Example sentences of "she [vb past] [conj] it have " in BNC.

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1 She realised that it had been deliberately left open to add to her humiliation .
2 She was trembling with anger and tiredness , her legs a little unsteady from the effect of the aquavit , as she realised that it had begun to rain again .
3 Lucy also saw the plan Doreen had in mind , but she doubted that it had much to do with married couples in search of outdoor adventure .
4 When she came to pay for the bill , she found that it had already been paid .
5 Taking up an oil-can she went out and towards the old outbuildings , to the door next to the one leading into the barn and , moving it , she found that it had n't been oiled .
6 But , much to her surprise , when the bread was baked and she took it out , she found that it had turned to a beautiful large loaf of the finest wheat flour .
7 She learnt that it had been developed in the 1920s by a German physician , Dr Max Gerson .
8 Whether she realized that the French alliance of 1548 was exceedingly fragile , entered into faute de mieux , or whether she assumed that it had a solidity which almost three centuries might have been expected to give it , is not clear .
9 She 'd put a fifty-pound note in it and so she thought that it had been stolen .
10 Now , she knew that it had not been a hallucination , it had been real .
11 Losing two front teeth , even two false front teeth , at the age of fifty , even if only for a week , had distressed him : he had sat opposite her at the breakfast table with a napkin over his mouth , and she knew that it had taken some courage to go to the board meeting at all .
12 She knew that it had not gone unremarked …
13 On the previous Tuesday , she knew that it had been , in Johnny 's time , the 15th of August .
14 Even though she had only had time to glimpse the devastation that had been wrought , she knew that it had been a professional job , carried out by men who would leave no trace behind them .
15 Richard 's Johnson , obedient to the pressed button , came to life at once , and she saw that it had never occurred to him that it might n't .
16 She saw that it had been a mistake — an evasion perhaps ? — ; to hamper herself with the abstractions of that cryptic poem .
17 She waited until it had stalked away before picking up the remains of the Geiger-Muller counter and dropping them into the holdall .
18 She accepted that it had been a shock to me , and she understood that I was feeling upset . ’
19 She explained that it had been dyed , and as the English-speaking French boy explained to his friend , she caught the word ‘ Morte ’ .
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