Example sentences of "[Wh adv] she have [vb pp] " in BNC.
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1 | She had been smoking dope now for the last year , scoring whenever she had saved up enough money from her weekend job at McDonald 's . |
2 | Somehow she 'd been expecting resistance , something she had frequently encountered with Graham Rowell whenever she had attempted anything new , and it came as a shock to find that she and David Markham were on the same wavelength . |
3 | Whenever she had allowed thoughts of sharing a bed with Fen to enter her mind , just the imagining had racked her body with sensuous shivers . |
4 | Whenever she had arrived before , with her mother , or on her way to stay with relatives and school friends , it had been full of innocent bustle presaging lunch at Marshall and Snelgroves and tea at Fortnums . |
5 | Apparently , whenever she 'd gone close to this man he 'd shooed her away , recoiling from her and muttering , ‘ Pork , pork , pork , VD , VD , white woman , white woman . ’ |
6 | ‘ God , ’ her husband said , whenever she 'd brought him home before her father died , ‘ what a bloody awful climate … ’ |
7 | Try and encourage her , excuse me , try and encourage her to come and see you whenever she 's got a problem . |
8 | How she had suffered for him , for her poor pitiable ridiculous father , how she had hated her cruel peers for their relentless mocking , how she had dreaded each Christmas pantomime , each school-leavers ' farewell , each assembly that she knew her father was due to conduct , each occasion on which she heard him open his mouth in public . |
9 | One woman described how she had gone back to work after the death of her husband , determined to be brave . |
10 | Lamont told how she had gone round the dining room at breakfast handing out brochures about her Foundation . |
11 | For example , she described how she had gone about painting ‘ The Shelton with Sunspots ’ ( 1926 ) which was exhibited in 1927 : ‘ I do n't start until I 'm almost entirely clear . |
12 | Lady Maude nodded , remarking how she had heard that Sir Ralph was a hard , cruel man . |
13 | She was just congratulating herself that Fen need never know how she had weakened when the galley light was flicked on . |
14 | That was how she had met Jonas Hamilton , at an antique sale in Martinique . |
15 | Afterwards she wondered how she had kept silent , holding her breath , listening to the drumming of her heart . |
16 | Ella told me , that evening , of how she had lost her husband in a London blitz , when her house and all her personal possessions had been destroyed by a Nazi bomb . |
17 | Maxim had noticed how she had adopted certain American phrases and mannerisms as well , not because she was trying to pass as an American , but just to blend into the background . |
18 | She knew how Beth had gone to the lodging house on the night when her own father disowned her ; how she had run to her lover only to be turned away from there broken-hearted when the girl claimed that Tyler was the father of her own mythical child . |
19 | How she had missed it . |
20 | He knew Katherine Lundy 's reputation in Dublin , knew what she was , knew how she had achieved her reputation there and how she had carved herself a slice of the London underworld . |
21 | This was n't going at all how she had hoped . |
22 | She remembered with strange clarity the concentration she had put into cutting the flowers ; how she had hoped her father would think she had chosen the right ones . |
23 | Once more she saw the attractive man she had noticed in the High Street , and her colour rose as she recalled how she had hoped to meet him some day . |
24 | He did n't see any reason to mind it , but he wondered how she had developed such a good instinct for discovering his whereabouts . |
25 | Remembering how she had stood on the tower battlements the next morning , watching her knight ride away . |
26 | She could never forget how she had swung the boy , a little thing of six or seven ; that nor the heat ; as all the purr of a pussy cat , the linger of her hand . |
27 | Jessamy closed her eyes and wondered how she had lived without this sweet physical contact for so long . |
28 | Elizabeth , watching , felt an unexpected sympathy for her , remembering how she had felt herself , with baby Alan in her arms and him not even hers . |
29 | She had forgotten all her troubles , the long school day — how she had felt , so monstrous , the little children , standing with the tawse . |
30 | But long before the narrative fell into place , before I could dress the eleven-year-old of my imagination in the clothing of the 1870s , I knew perfectly well what that child had done , and how she had felt . |