Example sentences of "that she [verb] in " in BNC.

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1 Neither did he , for the moment , recognise her own diffidence as an indication that she felt in the same way about him .
2 Somehow he knew that she felt in need of comfort that weekend — even that provided by the man she had most cause to hate .
3 It was during those months of waiting that she felt in her heart that her husband was once again seeing Camilla .
4 With a final effort that she felt in every nerve of her body , she jerked her hand from his and turned away to the fire .
5 Sun glinted off the water and the golden light was so pellucid , so dazzling , that she felt in her bag for her sunglasses .
6 On that instant she put down her comb , and turned her back on her dressing-table mirror — and at the same time rejected any notion that she felt in any way excited .
7 That she keeps in touch with ?
8 And yet it was not the face of her customer that she saw in her mind , but the strong lean jaw and the dark unfathomable eyes of a stranger .
9 She had hated the pity she thought that she saw in her mama and papa 's eyes , and when her papa had suggested that she might like to spend a year in London with her Uncle Orrin , be presented at court , meet his old friend the Prince of Wales , now King Edward VII , again , she had agreed with alacrity — she , who had hated being parted from her mama and papa .
10 It was of no help to her inner disquiet , as she left her room , that she saw in her mind 's eye a picture of the aristocratic-looking Ven Gajdusek .
11 ‘ They were n't like you when I was at school , ’ had been his amused reaction when she had told him that she taught in the village .
12 Tradition required not only that she rot in constricted shade with the disintegrating corpse of her husband , but that she also eat a special diet for the entire period , which excluded any rice at all .
13 No doubt the jury would have been interested to hear that the victim had convictions for offences of dishonesty , and conceivably even more impressed ( though in law they would be wrong to be ) to learn that she had in the past tried to stab a policeman .
14 Again , yes , but not the sort of clubs that she had in mind .
15 He confiscated two apples that she had in her handbag , and warned her about penalties for importing plant and vegetable matter .
16 The news that she had in fact been successful in her interview went a very long way to ease her bruised feelings — so much so that when the day dawned when she was to start her new job she almost forgot to pull her hair back into a screwed-up knot , and to don her glasses .
17 Fabia saw no point in butting in to comment that she had in fact come very close to doing that very thing , and after a few moments ' pause Ven went on , ‘ I knew I 'd bruised your pride , but that had been necessary when my desire for you had threatened to blot out reason .
18 What 'll her experience that she had in New Zealand ?
19 The length of the time that she spent in Cambridge .
20 The chief US negotiator , Carla Hills ( the Special Representative for Trade Negotiations ) , said on April 6 that she hoped in the near future ( i ) for an amendment of Japan 's Large Retail Store Act , which currently made it difficult start up new retail outlets ; and ( ii ) a restructuring of Japan 's Patent Office , which was accused of taking an average 37 months to approve new products for the Japanese market , and thus of effectively hampering the import of new products .
21 Well , perhaps one could believe that , but not- ’ Her voice dropped further now and her head came towards Peggy , saying , ‘ Not that you never bathed her , never had bathed her , and that she got in the bath with her father every night .
22 She complained of too little to do now that she lived in the village as companion to an elderly lady .
23 Then I thought that she lived in the cottage — Maria looked after her , perhaps ; or perhaps this room that was to be mine for the week-end was normally hers .
24 She 'd been letting on that she lived in one of those posh houses .
25 What is known about Jane is that she lived in a cellar in Wisbech , earning her living by reaping in the fields in the summer and spinning wool and flax in the winter .
26 It turned out that she lived in some place called Romford and as she was due to take me back there the day after the funeral I had only been left with a few hours to make a decision .
27 At the start of the story Anna is portrayed as being ‘ perfectly unaffected and was not trying to conceal anything , but that she lived in another , higher world full of complex poetic interests beyond reach ’ .
28 Well , for instance , that she lived in a in an old vicarage , cos her husband had been a a , no a tri , priest in the Church of England and er we her house was haunted and she was telling us stories and sh she quite often saw the ghost , she was never worried , she never cos it never frightened her it was n't vicious or anything like that and she often saw it quite matter of fact .
29 She hurled the words at him with such violence that she paused in order to catch her breath .
30 There was no other way she could think of , except to show the obscene and pathetic distortion of humanity that she came in peace .
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