Example sentences of "where she had [verb] " in BNC.

  Next page
No Sentence
1 But in her earlier study where she had viewed the alternants as being ‘ equivalent ways of saying the same thing ’ she did not attempt to ‘ account for the interplay between the differences in modal meaning and the social conditioning in the use of these forms ’ ( Lavandera 1982 : 90 — her translation ) .
2 She was a pitiful sight , still lying where she had fallen , too terrified to move an inch .
3 She swore , but lay where she had fallen .
4 And all the time , she thought as she sat at her desk nursing the remains of her hangover , Angy had been dead in her little one-room flat , alone and open-eyed , lying where she had fallen with the knife in her throat and her lifeblood flooding her lungs .
5 Curtains hung pleasantly in the windows , and it seemed that if she turned her head away and back , then the table might reappear where she had sat , where she had served her soup to her mother , sometimes to her mother 's guests .
6 She removed her hand from Owen 's arm , where she had placed it .
7 She could n't eat any of her meal and went off to school where she had to sit alongside Mr Clark 's daughter .
8 When she was gone he turned and looked after her , feeling the touch of her still , the warmth on his cheek where she had kissed him .
9 Beg at Duart gate to be let in , where she had ruled till two hours ago ?
10 The writing was a bit jagged where she had pressed hard , and her grasp of grammar and writing was n't as good as her skill at reading , but it was clear enough .
11 She was exhausted , and her bruises , where she had tumbled on the floor , ached uncomfortably .
12 Where she had grown up ?
13 Just the very fact of being there , with her parents , in the place of her childhood , in the lovely , slightly shabby rambling old house where she had grown up , was sufficient to effect an almost miraculous cure .
14 She was totally unsuited to anything where she had to organize herself .
15 At seven p.m. she entered the wine bar where she had arranged to rendezvous .
16 Some of the more difficult cases turned up at her office , where she had to cope without professional help .
17 She had already spent an hour weeding and was determined to uproot a particularly tough dandelion ; then coffee , then the weekend shopping and then off to the sailing club where she had enrolled for a course of lessons in board-sailing .
18 The Paris conference where she had met Fergus had been on Gender and the Autonomous Text .
19 One compositor , Jean Henderson whose daughter kindly provided me with information , went into the trade ( in the 1890s , that is some time after the earliest entrants ) straight from the Dean Orphanage , where she had received a good education ( see Plate 1 ) .
20 I read it through , then crossed out where she had written ‘ Miss ’ at the top and wrote ‘ Dr ’ instead .
21 Yes , she was undoubtedly holding down a real job , in a man 's world ; and where she had gone , other women would follow .
22 The eagle was clinging with his talons to the wall of the old female 's cage and seemed to be looking into it as if to work out where she had gone .
23 So at first the people of Weatherbury had no idea where she had gone .
24 On the other hand , if Cindy Hill was genuinely missing , who better to find out where she had gone — or been taken — than the police ?
25 Westmore James had followed her to Banbury guessing that'e where she had gone .
26 Allison Dutton , 24 , was working late at her office in Cherbourg , France , where she had moved to live with her fiance , when she was stabbed 18 times .
27 And when Albert and Mister Johnny came in , she cut the pie and told them about the big fair that was held every Michaelmas in the Norfolk village where she had lived when she was a little girl about the gay gipsy carts and the fire eater , and the booth where you could have a tooth pulled for sixpence with a brass band to drown your screams ; about the two-headed calf and the Bearded Lady and the Toffee Woman .
28 In twelfth-century legend St Valerie was the martyr ( J saint who personified Aquitaine and her story as told at Limoges — where she had lived and died and where her " thousand-year-old " body was still preserved was intended to show that Limoges was a more venerable city than Poitiers .
29 It was so much more congenial than the flat near Victoria — unsuitably dominated by Westminster Cathedral — where she had lived with her mother .
30 Gabriel had collected Steve from school and brought him home , where she had cooked him a meal .
  Next page