Example sentences of "to her and [pron] " in BNC.

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1 Here , she took a step back and called on Ferdinando to discuss Garibaldi and his Red Shirts and the promises of Cavour — they were names to her and nothing more .
2 Something was happening to her and something told him she needed help .
3 And my mum , my mum was sat in The Weathers with me and I 'd talked to her and everything and I did n't even know that that
4 ‘ She had a distance to her and everyone was in awe of her , ’ she recalls .
5 The case , which is being heard in secret , is believed to centre on payments to her and their two children , Daniel , 9 , and Lauren , 5 .
6 it 's not just like going going on a bus and but erm my daughter 's very generous and seeing that we we get to her and we spend about three months with her .
7 I 'll talk to her and we 'll try to work something out . ’
8 Erm we set up I think a very successful service and if I could just mention a sad note here , me some members will know who was the county occupational therapy coordinator largely designed the service here and I 'm very sorry to say that er she died the other day but her service is very much a tribute to her and we do in fact have a large number of people who will want to come and work for us as OTs because it is a good service and I 'm sure that you will agree with that .
9 Her mistress crossed to her and they stood in silence , side by side , while the rully was driven into the stable-yard .
10 But then , if I 've talked to her and they have n't , they ca n't argue can they ? ’
11 First to er , Peter 's point about er Gillian Sheppard , on the er , on the er Direct , I must say to you , I got a bit of a surprise when I saw Gillian Sheppard in such brazen er fashion on er on Direct , but you know , you 've quickly got answers in this organization , and somebody said ah well , it was meant to be an obituary to her and they were a bit perceptive in that er respect .
12 He proposed to her and they got married .
13 Jean Campbell , in 1817 , was an uneducated deaf person without any speech who could only write the initials of her name in reverse order , eg. C.J. She was an unmarried woman who had three children by different men , one of whom at the time of her arrest in April 1817 had been living with her as a common law husband but who had a few days earlier taken off the ring that he had given to her and which she wore on her finger in the fashion of a married woman , and had left home .
14 He told people of a bag he 'd lent to her and which was found with her body ; He said his fingerprints would be all over his wife 's cars steering wheel ; and he told the police she 's been violent and upset when he left him .
15 It has been claimed that Margaret saw the tunnel as some sort of monument to her and her period of government .
16 Barbara Macdonald , herself in her 70s , gives an excellent list of suggestions to assist younger women in relating to her and her peer group in a non-ageist way .
17 But the parting has brought some sweet sorrow to her and her landlord .
18 ‘ But it made a difficult situation impossible , caused distress to her and her husband and sounded the death knell on the marriage which until then , although in difficulties , neither of them had given up hope of saving . ’
19 Even Nannerl was distressed by Wolfgang 's new attachment , and complained that he neglected to write to her and her father .
20 There were visits and phone calls to her and her family .
21 Its failure to provide the counselling and support needed was unfair to her and her parents .
22 She had shot him for all the things he had done to her and her husband , shot him because , in the end , she still loved him , and it made his ultimate betrayal all the harder to bear .
23 It must have been hard for her — uprooted and transported to a strange country — not to know what was happening to her and her mother , apart from the fact that somehow or other they 'd been able to join up again with the father .
24 Mrs Moore soon abandoned her pretence as chaperon — encouraged by the unexpected surliness of Colonel Hope who seemed , to her and her ward , in a mood unlike any other they had found him in and unlike any they could previously have invented for him .
25 My father feared my mother as much as I did and wished me to please and agree with her always , for when I did not she would complain to him of my behaviour and I suspected that when this happened his new wife would complain in her turn that he paid too much attention to us and too little to her and her own children .
26 On and on it flowed past her , indifferent to her and her suitcase .
27 Rebecca Scott , for instance , a young artist who explores the associative and feminine-identified eroticism of flowers in big , richly coloured , sensuous canvasses , came across Irigaray 's work by chance recently and found that in its characterisation of female interiority , groundedness , concealed sexuality and dispersed sense perceptions , it spoke directly to her and her work .
28 Cati imagined Rosalba leaving her home with him , marching away with her back to her and her destination ahead unknown ; and she cringed .
29 The suicide theory wo n't occur to her and her common sense would tell her it 's unlikely to be written off as another accident .
30 Quite deliberately , she summoned the memory of the anguish of six years ago , the job she loved summarily barred to her and her Communications course sacrificed ; and she dwelt especially on the dilemma that had torn at her then , the agonising conflict between her obstinate determination to pursue an uninterrupted career in radio at a time when there were no positions to be had in Johannesburg but possibilities in Durban , and a heart-wrenching reluctance to leave her parents alone when advanced emphysema was shortening her father 's life so cruelly .
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