Example sentences of "because she have [adv] [verb] " in BNC.

  Next page
No Sentence
1 Perhaps it was because she 'd already seen countless admiring female eyes slide in his direction ; even though they apparently had n't recognised him in his goggles and ski-hat , still they were drawn by the sheer animal magnetism of the man .
2 William suggested , because she 'd just bought Mary Ann Evans 's and was always talking about the trouble she was having finding good staff .
3 It was because she 'd just started to sell them at the shop .
4 She said it was all just paper talk because she 'd just had a gorgeous postcard from Mark but it gets to them , I can tell you . ’
5 Because she 'd abruptly felt as if her heart would burst if she did n't let him touch her , kiss her , hold her in his arms again , and then the desire had escalated so quickly that kissing had n't been enough ?
6 He 'd always had the nicest smile , open and boyish , but she 'd forgotten the way his hazel eyes sparkled with greenish lights , perhaps because she 'd never seen him so tanned before .
7 Because she 'd never fallen in love , the head-over-heels , with-all-your-heart kind of love that made a woman 's world centre on one man for the rest of her life .
8 It was because she 'd never taken him seriously that the whole thing had come as a surprise .
9 Feeling a twinge of guilt because she 'd inadvertently brought it all up when all they wanted was for it to remain buried , and pushing aside for the moment the whys and wherefores of her grandfather 's involvement , Ellie apologised quietly , ‘ I 'm sorry .
10 He designed and built it specially for his wife because she 'd always wanted to live by the river , but she only had time to enjoy it for a few months before she died .
11 she said Chris oh you 're off the subsidy , she said I 'd got my wages anyway , er because she 'd only collected sixteen hundred and , hundred pounds so that , seven six are forty two , hundred and two pound you see
12 It was incredible but true — incredible because she 'd only known Fen for a week — incredible because she 'd begun by disliking him — but true that she was in love with him .
13 She was trembling , perhaps because she 'd suddenly remembered that the origin of the toast she had just drunk lay in the Viking custom of saluting each other by drinking from the skulls of their enemies .
14 Rage , part of it self-directed because she had temporarily forgotten it too , made her voice shake .
15 Much cleverer man than you would imagine by that livid green ’ — and then she would sail on , followed by Constance who , because she had rather liked the green , never forgot the name .
16 ‘ We are mystified at Alison 's action because she had already entered .
17 ‘ We are mystified at Alison 's action because she had already entered .
18 For Margaret Olmer , born in Vienna in 1931 , despite forebodings at Liverpool Street , rural life in Norfolk proved congenial and , perhaps because she had already had to learn to adapt , she settled in more quickly than the daughter of her host family who was evacuated with her .
19 Mum said no , I could n't have it because she had already spent her money .
20 The possibility was alarming , because she had already found herself susceptible to his masculinity .
21 The actress was found to be the settlor of the settlement because she had indirectly provided the funds of the settlement .
22 ‘ No , ’ she denied numbly , a hectic flush along her cheekbones , because she had just discovered that she also needed a man she could fight with , cross swords with .
23 Perhaps she was attracted to Jacqui 's work because she had just won a prize for designing a new uniform .
24 he was he was so horrified about it because she had actually run all that right from the beginning
25 For Marie , this was a constant source of worry , because she had continually to choose between understanding fully what she was doing , by asking demonstrators for help , and risking losing marks , or by not asking and floundering further and further in the experiment .
26 ‘ Oh , yes , ’ she replied , and because she had almost added that she had been going to travel with her sister — which would surely then have led to her boring him out of his skull with all of the rest of it , ‘ All alone , ’ she added with feigned cheerfulness .
27 She cheered up after writing the experiment because she had obviously done it rather well .
28 Sometimes he tried to catch her style in scraps of speech that he wrote in a notebook , because she had often told him to listen to the way strangers talked and to keep a record of conversations overheard in the Underground .
29 She was not frigid , but nor had she ever been a slave to purely carnal temptations ; because she had always placed a higher value on mental and emotional stimulation than on physical .
30 She could not say it was ‘ love ’ because she had always found it difficult to define the border between ‘ love ’ and ‘ friendship ’ .
  Next page