Example sentences of "[conj] [pron] have [verb] [pers pn] " in BNC.
Next pageNo | Sentence |
---|---|
1 | Something or someone had annoyed him and instantly she assumed it was because he was landed with her here in his house . |
2 | ‘ Something or someone has frightened you off men . |
3 | Something or someone has influenced them . |
4 | I opened my eyes eventually and took the compass out of my jeans pocket , where I 'd stowed it to have hands free for standing up . |
5 | I did n't dare return to the-place where I 'd killed him because I could easily arouse suspicion . |
6 | Later I saw blood on my hand where I 'd grabbed him . |
7 | Blood ran from his face where I had cut it , but I had fought too many fights that night . |
8 | ‘ Oh techniques of surveillance , when you 're sitting alone in a car you move into the passenger seat , make it look as if you 're waiting for the driver to come back … the trouble is , I never got a posting where I had to use it . ’ |
9 | I stacked the papers carefully and replaced them where I had found them . |
10 | I remember standing in the dinner queue and all these kids coming up to me , asking me if it was true , where I had got her from and what I was doing with her . |
11 | Where I 've wet it what 's it done to it ? |
12 | where I 've dropped it for , well then , it 's the toilet brush you see , I 've been going like this with the toilet |
13 | or I 've lost it on t' way running for bus . |
14 | And er this is what I do , Well I used to do jobs round here for a while or I 've chucked it up now aye . |
15 | I do n't know what 's happened lately — the machine has either taken notice and chosen to behave or I have mastered it at last , because I have managed to finish two sweaters this week ! |
16 | Flora or somebody had told her where to find him . |
17 | Paul 's ring was on the bedside cabinet , where she 'd placed it , and her handbag … |
18 | You called your wife a tart , which is your business and hers , but you also said that if you 'd known where she 'd gone you would have caught her at it . |
19 | She looked the same as usual ; untidy , a hole in her coat where she 'd caught it on a hook in the yard . |
20 | Then , obeying an impulse she barely understood , she took the silver medallion out of the inner pocket of her bag , where she 'd zipped it for safekeeping , and fastened the chain round her neck . |
21 | And squatting in what little shelter there was beside the door , just where she 'd expected him , Farquhar Neas . |
22 | She removed her hand from Owen 's arm , where she had placed it . |
23 | When she was gone he turned and looked after her , feeling the touch of her still , the warmth on his cheek where she had kissed him . |
24 | Gabriel had collected Steve from school and brought him home , where she had cooked him a meal . |
25 | This he read in the lavatory , where she had seen it on the first day . |
26 | From where she stood it shimmered in silver under a glancing sun , though upstream at the inn , where she had seen it close to , it rolled darkly brown and turgid , and laden with the debris of bushes , for the spring thaw had come late and violently , bringing down an immense weight of snow-water from the mountains of Wales . |
27 | But she was chronically untidy ; her clothes lying where she had dropped them , shoes kicked under the table , knickers and bras stuffed beneath cushions and Timmy 's toys littering the floor and table top . |
28 | The hammer was no longer where she had dropped it . |
29 | She walked up the path and leant wearily against the wall while she dug in her bag for her key , then groaned when she remembered that it was still lying on the floor of the car park where she had dropped it . |
30 | Susan 's head lay where she had rested it , one arm curled round , the other hanging so that her fingertips brushed the floorboards . |