Example sentences of "and that her " in BNC.

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1 But I am prepared to accept that her delusions of grandeur are a form of psychosis connected with ageing and that her refusal to consider retirement springs from an awareness that it is she , not the country , who is in danger of falling to bits is she desists from hyper-activity .
2 The local authority decided that it would not be possible to rehabilitate the child with her natural parents and that her welfare required that her future lay elsewhere .
3 I am glad that Bill Jackson 's wife ( an ex-Waaf ) persuaded him to write the book , and that her beautiful little poem about P-Peter 's crew is included .
4 When Diana became patron of the Welsh National Opera , one of the original five patronages she took on when she became Princess of Wales , she confessed that she did not know very much about opera — and that her principal love was ballet .
5 Mrs Browning did not wish to hold him , saying she feared her arms were not strong enough and that her cough might disturb him .
6 But bit by bit , Wilson became aware that she had some small skill in the matter of keeping a boarding house and that her future , and her family 's , might indeed lie in that direction .
7 Difficult though it was for her , however , are we entitled to assume that her French upbringing was bound to give her an adverse picture of her Scottish kingdom , and that her view was justified ?
8 It could be speculated that the poem was written after Leapor 's dismissal from Edgcote House , and that her father was extremely angry at her returning as his dependent .
9 When she said that she only wanted £10 for looking after little Doris , and that her mother could come and visit as often as she liked , a deal was struck and a tearful Evalina waved goodbye to Mrs Stanfield and her small daughter .
10 In a visit in the spring of 1987 , I met a teacher who confided that the externally-imposed testing system pre-empted the use of 30% of her total professional time , and that her own independent judgements ( which she saw as more valuable and inseparable from her natural teaching style ) occupied a further 20–25% of the time .
11 She forgot that she was tired and cold , that there was neither food nor fuel in the house , and that her only respectable pair of shoes had sprung a leak .
12 They heard that her debts were £8,000 exclusive of the £10,000 needed to pay off annuities ; and that her house , land , furniture , books and wine were valued at £17,500 .
13 Although Elizabeth felt reluctant , she was thankful to settle down in bed , knowing that her mother would see to Edward and that her sister would gladly take on her share of the farm-work .
14 Deep in her inner mind , therefore , Kirsty believed that something terrible was going to happen and that her health would fail .
15 She was well aware of Anne 's tenseness — that this was no casual question and that her reply , at least to Anne , was all-important .
16 She could hear the regretful , gentle voice of Mother Francis telling her that life was never meant to be easy and that her best course was to work very hard now and get out of this place in record time .
17 But meeting the neighbours who knew who she was and that her mother-in-law had moved to another county rather than come face to face with her — that really frightened her .
18 He could see that her lower lip was trembling and that her eyes were moist .
19 Rumours abounded that the reason was that Magdalene ( a pupil of Mozart 's ) had also been the composer 's mistress , and that her unborn child was Mozart 's .
20 Likewise , various scurrilous attacks were made on Constanze 's honour , suggesting that during her frequent sojourns in Baden she had taken Mozart 's pupil Süssmayr as a lover , and that her last child ( who bore Süssmayr 's Christian names ) was his .
21 He noticed that her figure was good and that her legs and ankles were very much better than those of the girls he remembered from his days in London before the war .
22 The Liverpool tribunal heard that Mrs Mawdsley , of Southport , could not have children and that her sister Kimi had been successfully impregnated with her eggs .
23 She realized she was down from the morph-plus , and that her senses were sharper than they had ever been before .
24 It was as if she had accepted the fact that her mother had gone out of her life and that her future lay with this big fat woman , who alternately yelled and cajoled , and the nice man called Ben .
25 There was a girl in charge of the place , a child of perhaps twelve , who told me that her name was Morag , and that her auntie had stepped out on a visit , but had said the young lady from Camus na Dobhrain might be there to use the telephone , and please to go through .
26 But Gilligan also says that she is not interested simply in data , and that her arguments do not depend on the statistical significance of her results .
27 The fact that ‘ She ’ appears to those privileged to see her as a veiled figure and that her lustrous orbs , dazzling limbs and perfect ankles are revealed with tantalising slowness , has a rather different effect on today 's readers than it no doubt had when the book was first published , very nearly a century ago , in 1887 , to be greeted with a storm of ecstasy or alternatively of appalled disapproval , which lasted for many decades .
28 And she also knew she was beautiful , enjoyed it , and that her mother , also beautiful , could see her own looks fading .
29 It served to stimulate further Japan 's belief that she was highly vulnerable in military terms and that her only course for survival as a strong and independent state must be the strengthening of her own military capacity .
30 For her stepmother to tell her meant that she and her father must sometimes talk about her , and that her father had undoubtedly on at least one occasion said that he thought Artemis had some ability .
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