Example sentences of "she have [adv] [vb pp] [prep] " in BNC.
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31 | But she has now gone through the barrier and that is important for her . ’ |
32 | She has now called in an exorcist from Beverly Hills to get rid of her celebrity ghosts . |
33 | Deborah Coleman was one of the highest-flying women in Silicon Valley with the title chief financial officer until she suddenly took a long sabbatical a couple of years ago : she did return to Apple Computer Inc and became vice-president for information systems , but quit again suddenly last week ; she has now resurfaced at Tektronix Inc as vice-president for materials operations , which is a new post . |
34 | She has now returned to Zaire and the diary is used as an official document during the school year . |
35 | One must pay tribute to her dedication , and the gratitude of all connected with the Club , past , present and future is her due for the patient hours she has obviously spent in researching club records , the Henley Standard and personal reminiscences of many people who have been associated with the Club 's story . |
36 | She has obviously learnt from her creator , who amended Defoe 's actual Tour through the Whole Island of Great Britain ( 1724–6 ) , by introducing with the aid of books further description of historic buildings , without venturing further into the country than his garden . |
37 | And , after some 40 exhibitions in cities all over the world , she can boast that every one of her 1,000 well-loved paintings has been sold , apart from a few she has deliberately reserved for herself . |
38 | Kate 's social worker organised nursery places for her two small children while she did her A-levels , and she has subsequently gone to a university where she can get creche facilities . |
39 | Do n't miss Fay Weldon 's complex , clever story The Cloning Of Joanna May , which centres on a woman who discovers she has unwittingly participated in a genetic experiment . |
40 | With noble , fine-boned features that have brought comparisons with Audrey Hepburn , she could have gone to Hollywood but has chosen British projects which she feels mean something — though she has routinely worked for the mere promise of a salary at some future point when the films make money . |
41 | She has recently returned from a journey in Romania to see the conditions of at least 1,000 children under the age of one , who had contracted AIDS through injections with dirty needles or contaminated blood . |
42 | Since 1990 she has really began to surface with work which is not for the faint hearted . |
43 | She was sent the script for one of the episodes — she has never said by whom — and was so enraged by one scene in which the councillor was to have been seen leaving a prostitute 's room doing up his trousers , that she sent it straight to the Postmaster General , the Minister responsible . |
44 | She has never cared for a disabled person before , but there is a natural love and empathy between them : she hugs Elaine a lot and they are very close . |
45 | ‘ She has never moved from Kinghorn . |
46 | Yes , Mrs De Luca has her own opinions about certain things , but she has never dwelled on their background or personal lives . |
47 | It has never been the Queen 's style to rant and rave when things have gone wrong — and in truth she has never needed to . |
48 | She has always relied on instinct , and for 55 years it has served her well . |
49 | We are a close family and she has always stayed in touch . |
50 | In recent years she has often taken to using the catalogue just for herself , looking on the agency commission as a personal discount . |
51 | The Queen for her own part will have to face up to the fact that , however perfect her public role , she has dismally failed in private to give her children the guidance they needed for stable marriages . |
52 | It may be that Britain has overemphasised the potential benefits of free trade ; that she has actually benefited from the protectionist philosophy which permeates the EEC ; that being a member of a cohesive new power bloc is what has counted ; that the ‘ fight ’ with the Americans over agricultural matters is a case in point ; that had she been on her own , Britain would have been trampled over by her cousins on the other side of the Atlantic . |
53 | We wonder if she has ever heard of chronic paranoid schizophrenia , and she tells us to be quiet . |
54 | Tomorrow , I shall make her eat , on toast and with ketchup , every word she has ever said about the men of the New World . |
55 | And the best advice she has ever had from a conductor ? |
56 | She 'd probably looked around the flat and compared it with the two shabby and incomplete rooms that she 'd just left , and the first foundations of the barrier would have been laid . |
57 | If she 'd already heard of Burrows ’ escape , she would assume that our attention would be directed towards him . |
58 | His voice was low , easy , the faint accent she 'd barely noticed before more pronounced now , unless it was just that her senses had been heightened by that devastatingly thorough kiss . |
59 | She was still feeling somewhat shaken an hour later — she was going to Prague — and with Ven ! — when suddenly she realised that she 'd barely moved since that phone call . |
60 | I think she 'd rather gone off this Yank . ’ |