Example sentences of "[that] her " in BNC.

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1 Jailed for believing that her country should be run differently .
2 This comparison has fazed her , as she only knows about Lee Krasner as the widow of Jackson Pollock ; so the library visit is intended to check out reproductions of Lee Krasner 's work , to see if she has to concede that her friend may be right .
3 In 1959 Dore Ashton was dismissed by the New York Times , the charges being that her articles were not aimed at a wide newspaper audience , and her articles on work by artist friends gave evidence of bias ( her husband , whose work she was forbidden to review , was a painter and print-maker called Adja Yunkers ) .
4 The scope or character of a piece of criticism is naturally related to the magazine or newspaper in which it appears , as we noticed in the case of Dore Ashton 's dismissal from the New York Times because it was asserted that her work could not be understood by the paper 's readers .
5 Jenny has urgently advised Tim to return to his dull wife , telling him that her dullness is the ‘ whole point ’ .
6 ‘ And did you tell the foreign gentleman that her husband was going mad with jealousy ? ’
7 However , I am not hopeful that her example will force the institution to reassess its attitude to the critical account , for even the fears of someone like Stead , which came from a central location of police power at the Staff College at Bramshill , seem to have largely fallen on stony ground .
8 She always worried that her friends would n't like one another .
9 What I did n't realise was that her holiday started the day after she 'd had dinner with me , she was going to Italy to look at churches with her beloved son .
10 On a first visit to a partner 's parents , she decided , she would want to make it clear that her relationship was primarily with him , not them .
11 She switched off the CD player , went into the bedroom , checked that her black dress , red jacket and red shoes were spotless for the morning : tucked a red and gold scarf and a couple of gilt bracelets into her bag to wear in the evening and went to bed .
12 Too late she regretted that her blueprint contained no clause on messy eating .
13 She pretended to agree , suspecting that her time for trying the landlady 's leniency would be next .
14 Her shy confession of love is in deep contrast to that of Natalia , who can not wait to show that her emotions are fully aroused when left alone with the same man .
15 The moment she encounters Romeo and senses somehow that her life has changed her movement becomes more purposeful .
16 From there onwards it becomes stronger and more emotional so that her joyous movements and later abandon in Romeo 's arms are in absolute contrast to her later dance with Paris .
17 Her movements then are equally purposeful but they are constricted and withdrawn , so that her father 's contemptuous rejection of her pleas and his throwing her to the floor seem the proper outcome of what in his eyes is sheer disobedience .
18 Now the remarkable circumstance , recorded by Anna Dostoevsky in her memoirs , is that her husband had a foreboding of political disturbances at the Academy , and fearing that his brother-in-law ‘ because of his youthfulness and weakness of character might take an active part in them ’ , he persuaded Anna 's mother it would be a good thing if the young man came to them in Dresden : which he did in October of 1869 , the month before Ivanov was murdered .
19 But this is almost certainly an illusion : as she becomes surer of her hold on the affections of her poet , so she becomes surer of herself , can dispense with affectations , and dares to speak with a certain authority about compositions that her lover sends to her — animadversions that the poet in turn receives quite humbly .
20 The state court said the state 's ‘ unqualified interest in life ’ should prevail over their assertion that her right to privacy gave her the right to die gracefully .
21 At the same time she knew that her gender isolated her from the ritualised socialising of other senior officers .
22 In 1986 she contacted her local authority for help ; it was then , she says , that her life changed for the worse .
23 She was just like me , she had been told that her prognosis was good and yet here she was four years later .
24 Yesterday she emphasised again that her decision was based on ‘ sensitive information ’ that showed Marcos 's return could be destabilising .
25 Her evidence of damage was limited and established that her reputation was already damaged . ’
26 She had no doubt that her children were too important to be brought up by anyone else and , as others went on to become household names , she became a full-time mother , writing occasional children 's books as well as a storybook-guide to the handling of epilepsy based on experiences with her own son .
27 We can observe that she is happy only when she is furious , and do not need to have it suggested that her earlier nickname of ‘ Thatcher Milk-Snatcher ’ derived from her own breast-deprivation , which denies her all happiness and allows her ‘ only the sadistic triumphs of tawdry political and military victories . ’
28 But I am prepared to accept that her delusions of grandeur are a form of psychosis connected with ageing and that her refusal to consider retirement springs from an awareness that it is she , not the country , who is in danger of falling to bits is she desists from hyper-activity .
29 But I am prepared to accept that her delusions of grandeur are a form of psychosis connected with ageing and that her refusal to consider retirement springs from an awareness that it is she , not the country , who is in danger of falling to bits is she desists from hyper-activity .
30 She then added ‘ It is n't over until it 's over ’ , confirming that her husband intends to appeal against the decision .
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