Example sentences of "she have [vb pp] [adv prt] [prep] [noun sg] " in BNC.
Next pageNo | Sentence |
---|---|
1 | ACTRESS Mia Farrow does not have a new man in her life now that she has split up with film director Woody Allen . |
2 | She has gone down in history with this quote when she spotted a likely-looking toy boy at a celebrity bash . |
3 | ‘ As far as I know , she has gone out to dinner . ’ |
4 | Under present law , whether a man administers a threat or not , he can be liable for rape if he has sexual intercourse with a woman knowing that she has submitted out of fear . |
5 | A few of them would have been a serious giveaway in any frontier search , but these she 'd covered over with postcard views bought from the Europiskaya Hotel . |
6 | Sandy was a few months younger than Wayne , but unlike Wayne she 'd stayed on at school . |
7 | Was n't he the one with whom she 'd grown up at Sleet when his father was head keeper before him ? |
8 | Harriet made a grunting sound that meant she 'd given in under protest and Jess did n't wait for any other sign . |
9 | That he 'd noticed she 'd got a decent figure was to be expected , she supposed , seeing that the lace cotton blouse and culottes she had worn that time she 'd gone out to dinner with Travis had touched her contours comfortably . |
10 | long , very nice , very posh , erm I do n't know what me dad 's is like , er me mum was laughing er yesterday erm with er doing all this work she 'd done a load of washing and pegged it all out and when she 'd got in from work dad had ironed it all |
11 | She had moved out of hearing . |
12 | Mrs Ross ’ s condition had deteriorated ; she had fallen out of bed and it seemed she might have suffered a further stroke . |
13 | But by then the world knew that Diana loathed the sport — and suspected she had fallen out of love with Charles . |
14 | Although she had run out of steam and no longer cared whether she lived or died , there was no way she was going to give up . |
15 | She had reacted out of habit . |
16 | She had worn it twice , once when she had gone out for dinner with her father and Leo and on the night of Sylvie 's return from Italy . |
17 | She had gone about in awe of these adults , to whom she must-not chatter , before whom she must be silent and polite and smiling . |
18 | When she thought of the baths she had wallowed in at home , the scented soaps and thick towels , the perfumes and the lotions , she wanted to cry . |
19 | At one stage she had ended up in prison , then she had contracted HIV from a violent husband who was a heroin addict . |
20 | She also admired Matilda who had sworn her to secrecy about the parrot job she had brought off at home , and also the great hair-oil switch which had bleached her father 's hair . |
21 | When eventually she had arrived back at Briar Cottage , there had been no concealing her distress from Bess Halidon . |
22 | She had climbed out of bed , pulled on a wrap . |
23 | She had an impression of being lifted up from the bed — she had cried out in agony , feeling as if she would break in half — and laid upon a stretcher . |
24 | Madeleine was sitting at the red and black wicker table in the little conservatory at the back of the house , pinning a paper pattern on to the green and blue paisley material she had spread out in front of her . |
25 | She was still wearing the ugly straw that she had put on for morning church . |
26 | Of course , she had come up against death , or the prospect of it , many times in the course of her work , but somehow she had never acquired the sort of immunity against emotional involvement , that almost instinctive shutting off , as so many of her colleagues had seemed to do . |
27 | She had come in from work one evening to find her mother and father dead in each other 's arms . |
28 | She began to ask questions , about the other two women , the Refuge , even some of the mysterious topics she had picked up from meal times . |
29 | She herself had never aspired to a career , finding complete satisfaction in acting as her husband 's typist and research assistant in the time she had left over from gardening and housekeeping . |
30 | But social worker Jenny Barker wishes she had held out against pressure to promote her four-year-old daughter Ruth from nursery to reception . |