Example sentences of "[vb -s] that she has " in BNC.

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1 ‘ If the creditor takes adequate steps to inform her and reasonably supposes that she has an adequate comprehension of the obligations she is undertaking and an understanding of the effect of the transaction , the fact that she failed to grasp some material part of the document , or , indeed , the significance of what she was doing , can not , I think , in itself give her an equity to set aside , notwithstanding that at an earlier stage the creditor relied upon her husband to obtain her consent to enter into the obligation of surety .
2 At Nice we were to change trains : as we 're getting up Constanza notices that she has n't got her ruby , her ring .
3 A READER writes that she has been trying for weeks to find the outcome of the Prime Minister 's ‘ Taking Stock ’ exercise .
4 Leapor insists that she has not exaggerated the perils of marriage :
5 He insists that she has always had plenty .
6 The debtor says that she has not carried on business in this country since 8 May 1987 , the date upon which the business was sold .
7 Ann says that she has seen many changes over the years .
8 ‘ Apparently Emma and Sophie are fine — bearing up very well — although Mrs Meadows says that she has n't done any more than to tell the children that their parents have had a slight accident .
9 However , Sally Kuenssberg , a specialist in children 's panel training in the department of adult and continuing education , says that she has been appointed as an individual with experience of the needs of children .
10 Damaris discovers that she has been guilty of intellectual sin in failing to believe , to realize imaginatively , the nature of the material she is studying .
11 However , he soon discovers that she has a voracious sexual appetite , which he finds almost impossible to satisfy .
12 What happens if a customer complains that she has been given the wrong change ?
13 Some fathers say that their child does as he 's told while the mother complains that she has no control .
14 She gathers that she has been lucky on her journey to avoid the widespread banditry , carried out more often than not by deserters from the army .
15 As Blanche realises that she has no one to turn to she is forced to return to her own world .
16 She reveals that she has always carried a photograph of Levy in her handbag and still does so today .
17 I The seller shall prior to completion of the purchase carry out and complete in a good and workmanlike manner and with good quality materials the following works to the property , namely : J AB the [ wife ] of the seller hereby acknowledges that she has no claim to or interest in the property hereby agreed to be sold adverse to the interest of the buyer and in consideration of the buyer entering into this agreement she hereby agrees that if so required she will join in the [ conveyance ] [ transfer ] [ assignment ] [ lease ] for the purpose of vesting the said property in the buyer free from incumbrances .
18 She even pretends that she has higher principles than many of the other characters in the play :
19 It is not the fact that as soon as she arrives she wants a drink which makes her alcoholic , it is the fact that she pretends that she has n't already had one by replacing ‘ the bottle ’ and by washing ‘ out the tumbler at the sink ’ .
20 But then the second girl wails that she has laughed away her whizz powder .
21 In passing she mentions that she has sometimes in despair hit her children .
22 Rainbow finds that she has finished speaking .
23 There is no doubt she feels that she has paid a high price for her royal life and looks forward to the day when she can spend a weekend in Paris or , as she says , ‘ I can run along a beach without a policeman following me ’ .
24 As an in-house lawyer , Janis feels that she has a ‘ hands-on ’ role in the commercial development of the company .
25 Lady Bertram , on the other hand , feels that she has a fortunate marriage due to this reason of her beauty and also considers it is every woman 's obligation to show off her looks .
26 When it emerges that she has been doing her voluntary work in York for just six years , her enormous commitment becomes clear .
27 In the preceding conversational fragment ( I ) , we shall also say that speaker A treats the information that she has an uncle as presupposed and speaker B , in her question , indicates that she has accepted this presupposition .
28 But growing up and learning how she ought to feel and behave , what she ought to value , means that she has to give up doing just as she pleases .
29 When the same scene happens night after night , his mother realizes that she has been doing the wrong thing , so instead she puts him to bed no matter how long or hard he cries .
30 Of course this is a self-destructive and lonely ‘ solution' ; Lucy herself admits that she has got caught up in a pattern of starving and bingeing which she is at the moment unable to see a way out of .
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