Example sentences of "she [vb mod] [verb] it " in BNC.
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1 | She wondered if she ought to point it out . |
2 | She ought to see it first . ’ |
3 | My dad , he thought she ought to do it , and he was amazed at me taking a stand . " |
4 | She ought to put it down . |
5 | She ought to put it down , anywhere , and take up a weapon . |
6 | I reckon she ought to share it . |
7 | She ought to share it . |
8 | If it did , perhaps she ought to try it herself . |
9 | Isabel Lavender , now sixty-eight years old , sat before the mirror , the pretty amethyst brooch at her neck , and felt that she ought to have it , for it was owed to her , it was a little enough thing to covet . |
10 | She may deserve it , and yet the reader pities her failure with her three generations of men — her father , her husband and her son — and is sorry that her grandson will be taken from her . |
11 | She is uninterested in fame ; she may attract it , however , and although she finds it annoying , she can turn it to good account for the work she is doing . |
12 | The law does n't make it that easy , quite apart from making you prove her infidelity ( she may deny it ) . |
13 | ( Well , she may call it research ; I call it industrial espionage . ) |
14 | She may find it difficult to raise this personally more pressing problem , but until the adviser acknowledges her priorities , Sally may not absorb what is said to her . |
15 | She may find it difficult to concentrate or interest herself much in anything or anybody . |
16 | She may find it difficult not to regard you still as the child who would do her bidding without question ; and you have to learn to see her , not just as your mother , but as a ‘ person ’ too , with good and bad traits in her character just like everyone else — not expecting silver-haired sainthood from her simply because she gave birth to you . |
17 | In other words , she may find it difficult to relate sequences of letters to their appropriate pronunciation . |
18 | Imparting some factual information but more commonly referring the sufferer to resources from which he or she may find it for himself or herself . |
19 | She may consider it rather selfish of him to want to reserve one day a week for his own personal pleasure . |
20 | If the baby is still attached by the cord to the mother then she may take it . |
21 | She may take it as a slight on her ability as a mother . |
22 | Having accepted that she must wear it , Alexandra then set herself to dress for the pleasure of the Rectory children , throwing good taste to the winds and insisting upon hanging herself with all that glittered from the jewel box Aunt Emily had left her , its rose suede depths heaped with treasures from Richard Talbot . |
23 | yeah I think , I do n't , she must lock it from the inside window back through |
24 | She must make it impossible for Theda to refuse . |
25 | ( 66 ) … she must make it plain before the evening begins that some or all of the financial responsibility for it will be hers . |
26 | So she must do it . |
27 | But no , she must do it while she 's young |
28 | She must do it now , though she was rushing to get ready for another appointment — this time with one of the estate agents in town who had rung to tell her he had an attic to let for what sounded like a very reasonable rent . |
29 | I must see her every day , she must face it full on and she , as , I must stay here , and so Alison must be here too . |
30 | She must stop it , tell about Joe 's terrible plight . |