Example sentences of "[pos pn] [noun] when she " in BNC.

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1 And as I say , there was always one I remember that sticks passively in my mind when she came over in one December five weekends on the trot !
2 I think she was having a joke at my expense when she did it . ’
3 ‘ I was off my rocker when she let me out .
4 my credulity when she wandered over the Moors and she was at death 's door , and she turned up at her cousins '
5 ‘ The girl did n't know I was in my room when she was changing the linen .
6 She would be putty in my paws when she awoke to see me with my superb physique and elemental masculinity , not to mention my irresistible voice .
7 ‘ I was walking down Piccadilly in 1973 with the woman who was later to become my wife when she grabbed me by the arm and steered me into St James 's church to see the carvings ’ .
8 Well I suppose at the , one of the best things , best examples of the difference was that my wife when she saw this house , knew that it was a house in which she could be happy , in which her tastes and , could spread themselves , erm rather than her tastes having to be curtailed by lack of space and lack of accommodation , erm , the fact that I had a garage which was essential er next to my house instead of some er quarter or twenty minutes ' walk away from where I lived as happened in London also made a terrific difference to comfort , erm the fact that there was a garden instead of a few windowboxes and a couple of tubs , all these things I think made one appreciate the fact that you 'd come , not only into a new town , but into a new way of life probably the fact that we had a staircase inside the house , which was the first time that we 'd had a staircase between our bedrooms and our living rooms
9 Only my daughter , and my wife when she was alive . ’
10 I 'd been living in the country with my wife when she died unexpectedly .
11 But I I er remember Margaret , my wife when she had the er the last one which is a a gap of about ten years between the third you know , and the fourth child
12 How horrible — and how lucky you were , Mr. Preston , to meet my aunt when she was old and did n't really know what she was doing . "
13 But even until ooh when , I , I can remember my daughter when she er was going to university .
14 She was polite , she gave me a small box of chocolates with a thank-you card and kissed me and shook my hand when she came for a meal on Sunday .
15 imagine my surprise when she caressed
16 The mysterious Fox — I was more certain than ever that he was Special Branch now — that wretched young woman lying there in the mortuary , and I remembered my unease when she 'd told me how she had returned that file at the Records Office .
17 The huge teddy bear had been installed on a chair in my flat , and scared my servant when she came in next morning .
18 There was an angel watching over me , as someone had once predicted in my childhood when she read my fortune in the tea-leaves , in my cup of white china with the gilt shamrock on the rim and in the centre of the saucer .
19 Thus I was , albeit subconsciously , prepared for his death , and I recall saying to my mother when she broke the , news one morning that " I thought something like this might happen . "
20 And the kitchen was just through there and er my mother when she used to bake and cook er the blue smoke would be everywhere and er it must have been terrible when you think about it you know , terrible , it must 've been .
21 My mother when she wanted anybody to turn off the wireless used to say .
22 Even she was surprised at Gedge 's tenacious loyalty to her ideology when she called at a local shop with him .
23 This was compounded in her case when she jumped 20 places on the world computer in 1987 after reaching the third round at Edgbaston .
24 This was compounded in her case when she jumped 20 places on the world computer in 1987 after reaching the third round at Edgbaston .
25 So how did Mrs Price win her case when she was alleging age discrimination .
26 Turning , she beheld Araminta at the head of the stairs , and remembered that Miss Merchiston had instructed her to go down to her parlour when she had left her mother .
27 She was feeling pleased with her progress when she walked in on a typical scene on the terrace of room 216 .
28 He kept her company and gave her support when she was pregnant and did n't like to go out .
29 She stared at him as he sipped his lager , thinking it was a shame his compassion for handicapped people had n't extended to her sister when she had most needed him .
30 several years in care , the sixteen-year-old could n't believe her luck when she landed a YTP place at Lurgan Community Workshop .
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