Example sentences of "[noun sg] [conj] she [vb -s] that " in BNC.

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1 In this case you should apply to Christine no fewer than three days in advance , and she may reset your card if she feels that this action is justified .
2 It would appear from her article that she believes that the unschooled Wolof have not passed through this stage .
3 For her at this stage , not crying is a great achievement but she hopes that some day she will reach a better balance so that her tears will be for herself rather than to make an impression on others .
4 Thelma did n't always bother every day because she knows that Ralph is here you see .
5 She seems a little slow off the mark when she asserts that the attempt to control drugs became ‘ a War only when crack emrged ’ .
6 And so erm , it was n't as though these children ran across an open zebra crossing and she could see the children travelling er , walking or running all the way across the er er er er the pedestrian crossing the two children one was estimated by her to be about six years old , and the one who was actually knocked down was estimated by her to be about er , nine years old and she was n't travelling at any significant speed at all , she was travelling slowly because of the amount of traffic and she says that er the first she saw them was erm , appearing from the behind a car and dashing across the front of her car , and in fact , it was only the the the one who ran first the the older of the two children that she actually hit , she hit hit her with the near side front of er of her vehicle .
7 Licences are needed for other types of brokerage and she argues that it would give her business respectability .
8 When she staggers out of bed , at some ridiculous pre-dawn hour , I have to make her trip over an unaccountably uncluttered expanse of floor before she sees that something is missing : the usual mess .
9 A more general sense of difficulty in sustaining order and regularity in the early twentieth century underlies Lily Briscoe 's comments in To the Lighthouse when she remarks that an artist 's brush may be the ‘ one dependable thing in a world of strife , ruin , chaos ’ ( Woolf 1927 and 1973 : 170 ) .
10 That link between childhood and adulthood that she shows that childhood terrors can affect adult biases , opinions .
11 They may have a joint account but she feels that it is his money because he earned it .
12 The sociologist Bernice Martin has perceptively summed up the situation in terms of recent English culture when she says that :
13 Laura Davies won the US Women 's Open in 1987 and such is the power that she generates that any time she plays really well she wins .
14 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 ’ .
15 Her dream is to be the director of a children 's hospital ; her boyfriend will own his own garage and she hopes that they 'll live happily ever after .
16 Joan has worked very hard and conscientiously during her term of office but she feels that a fresh look at the job through a new treasurer in 1987 can only be of benefit to the Society .
17 The Great Mother passes through a symbolic death as she recognizes that her body can bear no more children .
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