Example sentences of "she have [vb pp] [adv prt] to " in BNC.

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1 Since then she has gone back to Killarney .
2 ‘ As far as I know , she has gone out to dinner . ’
3 The fact that she has fought back to the level that she has now attained is a tribute to the loving care , encouragement and inspiration given her by her parents .
4 Her idol is the 1920s artist Varvara Stepanova , whose clothes designs she has reconstructed for museums and whose portrait , along with that of the revolutionary poet Mayakovsky , she has stitched on to another of her own red dresses .
5 I wondered if she 'd moved on to another place in the forest without saying anything , but when I stood perfectly still , I could hear the rhythmic scratching of her karaso from behind some trees , and the occasional tearing sound when she accidentally caught it in the undergrowth .
6 Once she 'd stepped on to the platform , there was nothing to do but turn , step , step , turn and nowhere to look but straight ahead .
7 Strange that David should be coming along at that very moment that she 'd emerged on to the main road .
8 Then she said , ‘ If you were a good-looking chap who wore Armani suits and washed-silk shirts and things , and you found yourself sitting across from a girl with freckles and a ponytail — or at least , a girl who used to have freckles and a ponytail — and you realized she 'd grown up to be gorgeous , would you go for her ? ’
9 ‘ I knew she 'd gone up to Jack 's — she always does now if he 's alone , makes no secret of it .
10 Pity she 'd gone off to Meath .
11 She 'd gone down to the seashore with the dogs and there he 'd been , following her .
12 That he 'd noticed she 'd got a decent figure was to be expected , she supposed , seeing that the lace cotton blouse and culottes she had worn that time she 'd gone out to dinner with Travis had touched her contours comfortably .
13 Well , she 'd faced up to and conquered one major challenge in dealing with Marianne — but that trauma would seem nothing when she was forced to face Dane .
14 or wherever she 'd sailed off to with their father
15 They sat around one end of the work table , which now seemed vast and empty , and Alina Peterson explained how she 'd walked down to the village to look around and , where it seemed appropriate , to introduce herself .
16 She 'd handed over to Madeleine .
17 It was difficult to deny the belief she 'd held on to for so long .
18 She 'd booked in to a hotel on the Place Gambetta , had a leisurely bath to iron out the kinks of the journey , then followed the receptionist 's directions to the old part of the town , a maze of narrow streets where old timbered buildings leaned amiably towards each other .
19 Tonight , since she 'd driven up to Mdina to join Roman 's party attending the Mnarja , was the first chance they 'd had to relax , explore any remaining vestiges of their relationship …
20 Once she had faced up to that , it was an easy decision .
21 She had moved down to London and lived in squats .
22 Hard to credit that he had once fathered a daughter — and a beautiful girl she had turned out to be — like her granny …
23 She could not refuse him , accordingly , and did not ; but more and more it was almost as if she had given in to Mr Poole 's demands ; one man was much like another .
24 During the short time their marriage had lasted , there had been so many times when she had given in to Julius 's forceful demands , just to keep the peace .
25 By some miracle she had hung on to her job with the Caring Chauvinist , but she found it exhausting coping with that , and running the house , and looking after Perdita , and more and more after Violet and Eddie .
26 Almost desperately she sought solace in her own private ‘ pictures ’ , the programme she never tired of , which she had projected on to her drowsy mind countless times as she lay in bed before dropping off to sleep , or half-awake on Sunday mornings .
27 Only George knew that she had run off to Brighton with a salesman , but his mother had guessed as much and beaten her daughter 's whereabouts out of him with a belt .
28 From the first night he had met her , when she had stood up to him in his own house , he had been attracted to her .
29 He had alarmed her but she had stood up to him fearlessly and he knew it .
30 Shelley looked at the date she had scribbled on to the surgery diary .
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