Example sentences of "[conj] [verb] her with " in BNC.

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1 Then , when his owner wanted to catch him she would grab the rope which was trailing on the ground , and take possession of his head before he managed to rear up on her or kick her with his hind legs .
2 I sometimes did little unexpected kid things out of my tenderness for her , and was always glad to be the one to take up tea for her if she was unwell , and so on , or to help her with the housework when she was servantless .
3 The words were delivered with a flatness that stopped her with her hand on the door .
4 Whoever owned the cabin had wide-ranging interests — apart from several well-thumbed fishing journals and a variety of motoring magazines , there were numerous glossies that provided her with food for thought .
5 It was a clear silver flame that hollowed her with its hunger .
6 It was the memory of the sparkling waters of Tenerife that helped her with her imaging , and her joy in at last succeeding in that therapy was immense and infectious .
7 Things that filled her with joy and drew her into the everyday lives of the two people she had loved for so many lonely years .
8 She 'd had a wondrous time with another man , a time that filled her with remembered textures and sensations , that would have left her smiling now if Parr had not become so damned intrusive .
9 ‘ He does n't live in a void , ’ said the poet 's wife on television , in a cut that shook her with its glibness .
10 The face that confronted her with so much earnest goodwill and innocence , and with , she felt mistrustfully , such incalculable thoughts behind it , was square and brown , with a good deal of chin and nose to it , and an odd mouth with one corner higher than the other .
11 And that faced her with a course of action which , for some obscure reason , seemed rather distasteful now .
12 Ants of knowledge were pick-pick-picking at her brain , fighting their way in , and she had no defences against them , but the data they brought were swirled and fragmented pixels that frightened her with their strangeness .
13 Backed by just one woman trainee officer she confronted the suspect in alley off Lawrence Road , the scene of an attack in December 1991 that left her with a smashed up face .
14 Not for the first time she cursed the lack of experience wth men that left her with no clue as to how to interpret what happened between them .
15 She could n't swim , so that left her with only two options : she could stay where she was and wait for whoever was lurking there to reach out of the darkness — but with her nature that was unthinkable — or she could run the gauntlet .
16 The latter become the ‘ mensonge vital ’ of fantasy and fiction that provides her with a means of coping in a hostile world .
17 The offender drove up behind the victim as she was walking in the street one evening with her daughter , aged two and a half , and attacked her with a hammer , striking her two blows on the leg and one on the knee .
18 She was nearly home and someone jumped out at her and battered her with a piece of wood .
19 One girl 's facial impetigo had to be painted with ointment that stung the scabs and branded her with unsightly violet-coloured splotches for several weeks .
20 She wondered at her own weakness in craving for a man who had professed his love for her and made her with child , only to walk away without even a backward glance .
21 She always accompanied her unpackings by such comments , always with the same indignant implication that the grocers did their best to defraud and anger her with every item .
22 Barbara Coleman stopped pouring and fixed her with a very severe look .
23 Sarah closed her eyes when he lifted her nightdress and entered her with no show of sentiment .
24 He stood before her as she sat on a low chair , and drenched her with his urine .
25 He stopped a pace or two away from the bed and regarded her with an unexpectedly teasing glint in his eyes .
26 He stuffed his hands in his trouser-pockets and regarded her with enigmatic eyes .
27 She was weeping now , and he knelt beside her , stiffly , and promised her with the touch of his hand on her shoulder that he would bring help .
28 A brawl among three women , for example , resulted in one of them ‘ scoring her face with a door key ’ because the other woman ‘ tore her hair and beat her with a poker ’ .
29 A legacy from a great-aunt had bought their house and provided her with a small income .
30 ’ Aim for the comm-booth that Mala called from , and grab her with the Magnigrip when she 's in range ’ .
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