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

  Next page
No Sentence
1 It was n't until later , when Robyn heard Anne 's key in the lock , that she realised just how long she had been staring into space , miserably going over and over the disastrous weekend , in a futile attempt to try and put it all back into some sort of perspective .
2 Perhaps she had been dropped onto his path on purpose .
3 She left the surgery clutching Lizzie 's collar ; in the space of a few minutes it was all she had been left with , apart from memories .
4 As soon as Honor was old enough she had been dragooned into helping with the housework , preparing meals if cook were ill , as well as acting as her mother 's companion .
5 So she had been asking after him .
6 so she 's been dealing with her Manchester solicitors and a London solicitor
7 In the few hours since she had brought the house down she had been interviewed by three tabloids , Sky Television and by Tony Howard for ‘ Newsnight ’ .
8 Luce froze , realising how easily she 'd been lulled into a false sense of security .
9 It has been a difficult day for the Queen and tonight she 's been snubbed following the decision by the municipality of Limassol not to present her with the keys to the town .
10 Lately she has been working as a $10-an-hour dresser at local fashion shows and answering phones at an aerobics studio .
11 For the first time she recognized that secretly she had been looking for some way out for herself and Midnight .
12 Eventually she had been sent to a psychiatrist to see if he could help discover the reason for what appeared to be a purely psychosomatic condition .
13 Mysteriously she had been transported into the bubble — and not only into the bubble , but also into the spacecraft .
14 Mrs Jones , who presented poppies to Falklands veterans during the ceremony , said later she had been angered by Civvies .
15 For some minutes now she had been disturbed by the way Beth was pacing to and fro in front of the great fireplace , a deeply thoughtful expression on her face , and her whole manner one of extreme agitation .
16 Pauline , the highlight of whose round was the eagle with which she followed a wind-tossed triple-bogey at the 12th , brought news of how she had been attacked by a couple of bitches .
17 That was how she had been known as a child when people had contrasted her with her sister Paula .
18 She has , you see how she has been pushed into this position .
19 Maybe she had been locked in her self-imposed prison for so long that now she was unable to control herself at all .
20 She was pleased at the distinction , and amused , as she told me , that twice she had been decorated by a Labour government ; she almost felt she ought to vote for them !
21 Emma had a spell at a small , local Welsh school then she had been sent to one of London 's most exclusive girls ' preparatory schools , off Sloane Square .
22 Until then she had been tortured by fears that she might not recognise her son if she should see him .
23 But at least she has been prepared for her party to stand in elections here .
24 There she 's been provided with Braille equipment and a talking computer .
25 When she had left Madam Lundy 's presence earlier she had been shivering with reaction , but that had now passed , leaving her calm , her options clear .
26 Her voice was shaking as she told me that on returning from the cinema a couple of weeks earlier she had been grabbed from behind , dragged into an alley and viciously raped at knifepoint .
27 One year earlier she had been seen in our hospital for joint pain and skin lesions on the lower legs which resembled erythema nodosum .
28 Twenty-four hours earlier she had been admitted to the Royal London Hospital , Whitechapel after a fall at her home in Stepney .
29 Thirty minutes earlier she had been going up the stairs to read the newspaper on the toilet .
30 A little overwhelmed by the extent of his authority , she understood why she 'd been drawn to him .
  Next page