Example sentences of "she have [adv] [vb pp] [adv prt] " in BNC.
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1 | She has successfully set up a resource centre for materials from Christian Aid and the Scottish Catholic International Aid Fund . |
2 | She has even given up her beloved Russian , learnt painstakingly with the help of an old Cyrillic typewriter . |
3 | Using the hypothetical examples above , for instance , this is how it might work out : skilled employment ( 4 ) the top possible score : employment duration — she has just gone back to work ( 1 ) ; housing — she has had to move to a smaller flat(l) so has n't been there long ( 0 ) ; she does have a bank account ( 4 ) ; but is separated ( 0 ) ; and quite young ( 2 ) . |
4 | Occasionally flicking back a stray blonde hair , Mrs Bottomley comes to the despatch box as if she has just leapt out of a hair spray advert . |
5 | MRS Thatcher 's friends tell me that she has finally come around to the idea of going to the Lords after the election . |
6 | I wonder if she has yet worked out that for every douse she has to pull less load ; probably not , or she would be pissing on the wood . |
7 | The teenager said she has now given up smoking and is looking for a job . |
8 | After the superbly wide-ranging anthology of Glass Work last autumn , she has now pulled out all the stops to arrange a further fabulous survey of all that goes into the making of a book . |
9 | But she has now handed in her notice and will leave the £15,000-a-year job in a fortnight . |
10 | She has now settled in ; she is doing more for herself , and sometimes she is full of life in the Home . |
11 | The Princess of Wales may not have been quick to learn at school — possibly because her lessons did not interest her much — but she has certainly made up for lost time since her marriage . |
12 | ‘ Of course , ’ he said , ‘ she has only come in to die , but I think that had she been removed before , much of her suffering would have been saved . ’ |
13 | She has never stepped out of line . |
14 | Her studies were interrupted by the opportunity to go into local politics , from which she has never looked back . |
15 | No wonder ; in her entire career in the Civil Service she has never typed out anything remotely like it . |
16 | ‘ She has always come back — she loves Anna very much . |
17 | Yes , she misses her mum and dad , and she misses the golden stretches of beach more than she has ever let on . |
18 | But she 'd already made up her mind . |
19 | She 'd already found out much more about Puddephat than she 'd hoped — she 'd even got a promising suspect in the shape of Theo Sykes — and there was no point in banging on about her non-existent book outline . |
20 | The more she thought about the situation she 'd somehow landed in , the more determined she became to get out of it . |
21 | She 'd finally drifted off to sleep at about two , woken an hour later feeling cold and slipped under the covers , resting fitfully until room service brought her breakfast at eight . |
22 | It had been a sweet night — the shadows growing deeper as they 'd talked , until she 'd finally drifted off to sleep with his arms tight about her and his lips on her hair . |
23 | She 'd just gone down there to look for any good-natured sucker . |
24 | That night in bed , not able to sleep , she remembered she 'd once knocked on Miss Malabedeely 's door and when Miss Malabedeely had n't answered she 'd just gone in . |
25 | I thought she 'd just popped out of her house like to have her hair done . |
26 | Charlie was dead keen on Lilian doing him credit and she always did , always looked as if she 'd just stepped out of a bandbox . |
27 | she 'd gone out , she 'd just slipped out with Alice for something |
28 | She 'd just got in , and her husband . |
29 | She 'd just walked in to the nearest doorway and spilled the whole thing to a complete stranger . |
30 | She 'd almost started out , but she was stopped by a touch on her arm . |