Example sentences of "she have [verb] [adv prt] [prep] the " in BNC.

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1 I actually have at the back which I will show in a minute , a costume that was worn by a woman in the eighteen-forties , and it shows how she has kept up with the fashion ; it is a fairly fashionable dress , but it is adapted for real life , for day to day life , for for the life of an ordinary middle class woman who had perhaps one or two servants , but had to do the running of the household herself .
2 She has sidled out of the kitchen .
3 ‘ You will wake Widow MacIntosh — ‘ She is not here , you fool — she has gone off with the mob . ’
4 ‘ We 've only got her for five years , then she has to go back to the Foundling Hospital . ’
5 The fact that she has fought back to the level that she has now attained is a tribute to the loving care , encouragement and inspiration given her by her parents .
6 Several times she has wandered out into the street while Mrs Smith was asleep , although now the front door is kept double-locked at night to prevent this from happening .
7 What , the two er eldest have to wash up and she has to sweep up round the table .
8 At the church she 'd ended up in the cliche/1 situation of being frozen out by Marius ' relatives .
9 She 'd moved over into the makeup chair and had been studying her own face in the mirror .
10 She 'd moved over by the window and had been reaching for a chair , but now she stopped .
11 Once she 'd stepped on to the platform , there was nothing to do but turn , step , step , turn and nowhere to look but straight ahead .
12 Nobody knew much about her , she 'd turned up in the town as a sort of companion-housekeeper to an old lady who had a house in Morrab Close , a Mrs Armitage — a widow .
13 Instead of liking the look of the water , wading in carefully and finding it was wonderful , she 'd tumbled in at the deep end .
14 Strange that David should be coming along at that very moment that she 'd emerged on to the main road .
15 She 'd stayed down in the lane with a sullen look on her face .
16 Close-to and without their performance wigs , these two hardly seemed to connect with anyone that she 'd seen out on the stage less than an hour before ; then they 'd been all front , carnival vamps , not so much real human beings as fantasy figures with hidden human operators .
17 She 'd gone back into the house to fetch something and his Dad was all ready in the car waiting to drive Uncle Walter back to his house .
18 She 'd gone down to the seashore with the dogs and there he 'd been , following her .
19 Well she 'd gone out through the door and the wind took her down the bloody street !
20 June Roberts said she 'd gone out in the car , saying nothing except that she 'd be back in time for cocktails at the Clarkes ' as she had promised , a business thing for Samuel .
21 After all the signals of rejection she 'd sent out at the apartment — despite Marlin , despite the dangerous streets , despite the hour , despite their bitter history — she 'd come , bearing the gift of her body to his bed .
22 She was cracking those damn peppermints in her back teeth to disguise the fact she 'd called in at the Oyster Bar on her way up . ’
23 As he moved away , Shannon sent a silent stream of curses after the mischievous imp in her soul which had landed her in this , desperately trying to remember the instructions she 'd skimmed through in the beginners ' ‘ learn-to-ski ’ handbook Kelly had given her .
24 Pete , thinking of the Venetz sisters ' reputation for efficiency and attention to detail , asked her if she 'd hit any problems over having no social security records or documentation ; she currently had the status of an illegal immigrant , after all , and had even dumped her hot French passport as she 'd walked out of the 78 air terminal .
25 They sat around one end of the work table , which now seemed vast and empty , and Alina Peterson explained how she 'd walked down to the village to look around and , where it seemed appropriate , to introduce herself .
26 Yet Mrs Blakey continued to sense the unease she 'd been aware of on the telephone , which she 'd first of all sensed when she 'd looked out of the landing window and seen the boy with the children in the garden .
27 And she 'd passed out in the phone box .
28 The literary articles were the result of her home study of literature — she had grown up during the establishment of the free library system in Britain , which she used extensively to supplement her elementary education .
29 She said with a shock that she realised she had grown up among the men on her father 's farm without seeing them as people you could conceivably fancy .
30 For , when she had woken up , rather late that morning , her usual brightness had been replaced by a quiet , sinking unhappiness , and instead of getting straight out of bed and opening the curtains to see what kind of weather was there , she had huddled down between the sheets , reluctant to face anything .
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