Example sentences of "she have [vb pp] on " in BNC.

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1 Now she has moved on again — in late October she took up a new appointment in Rotherham .
2 Speaking last night from the motel in Kelowna , 400 miles north of Vancouver , where she has lived on and off for the last three years , Mrs Allan said : ‘ I am not coming home until I have got my child .
3 Since then she has gone on to create exhibitions , including Zabat — a stunning series of Blackwomen 's portraits which will be exhibited at Camerawork Gallery in London from March 15–April 19 , and has now edited Passion : Discourses on Blackwomen 's Creativity , recently published by Urban Fox Press .
4 I suppose what 's happened is this : he has gone on staring out of the window , thinking , and she has gone on staring at him , waiting , with such absorption that neither of them noticed the tape had run out .
5 ‘ It still amazes me how much she has come on and is improving all the time .
6 She has come on Lisa has n't she ?
7 She wears her usual dull black leggings , and for the cool April evening she has put on a black woolly top .
8 With no qualifications and precious little experience , she has taken on the job of Princess of Wales and is turning it into a significant career — and at the same time has brought up two small boys .
9 She has worked tirelessly and helped raise millions of pounds for the charities she has taken on .
10 Like the Prince , she requests and gathers together information and reading material on all of the subjects she has taken on .
11 She has taken on the sophisticated royal machine and beaten it at its own game .
12 When not being a mother or supportive wife , she has taken on numerous appointments in areas that interest her .
13 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 .
14 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 .
15 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 .
16 As she had dressed she 'd kept on asking herself why he had come .
17 Strange that David should be coming along at that very moment that she 'd emerged on to the main road .
18 Sandy was a few months younger than Wayne , but unlike Wayne she 'd stayed on at school .
19 She 'd gone on into a book-lined room which appeared to be in use as an office , and she was placing the shotgun along with two others in a locking steel cabinet .
20 I knew she 'd gone on !
21 It was difficult to deny the belief she 'd held on to for so long .
22 Christina warmed to her and was glad for the trouble she 'd taken on the Morris 's account .
23 It was only a long-weekend break , perhaps , but after the never-ending block of work she 'd taken on since turning freelance she was more than ready for the rest .
24 Though there was one thing she was even more certain of than ever — this was no simple , straightforward assignment she 'd taken on .
25 He 'd covered her over with a coat and taken her few possessions inside , and she 'd slept on ; she 'd been the same way for the last couple of hours of the journey , ever since they 'd made their final stop at a twenty-four hour garage so that he could fill the Zodiac 's tank and buy some tape for a running repair to the headlamp that he 'd broken when , lights doused to escape notice , he 'd clipped the corner of the garage block on their way out of the parking area .
26 The first week she 'd signed on , her lover had packed her in and moved out .
27 And although his eyes did n't seem to move the prickle of her skin sensed that he had n't missed a thing , from the mass of dark hair which was now half-up and half-down , to the crazy oranges-and-lemons earrings which she 'd clipped on because — well , just because it was Saturday and sunny , and because she had felt like it .
28 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 .
29 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 .
30 Wardens had yelled at her , she had stumbled over rubble and hosepipes , her path lit by the glare of hundreds of fires , she had been terrified by the throbbing of the engines of the bombers overhead and the crump of bombs , but she had run on .
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