Example sentences of "[modal v] [verb] she [prep] [art] [noun sg] " in BNC.
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1 | I knew I should throw her to the patrol and make my own getaway , but she appealed to the chink in my armour . |
2 | Or if this is the whim of some trouble-stirring witch , you must beat her to the ground and punish her . |
3 | ‘ Perhaps we should send her to a tutorial college , ’ said Brian , unexpectedly . |
4 | We must bring her into the Hall . ’ |
5 | ‘ Then you must thank her for the invitation and suggest a postponement . ’ |
6 | So much so , that the doctor , who was new to the district , thought that for safety 's sake , Jim should take her into the hospital at Invercargill . |
7 | He rushed towards her so violently that Miss Fogerty put out her hands to grasp his shoulders before he should butt her to the ground . |
8 | Pretty little thing , but Philip must clue her in a bit about how to behave . |
9 | No one should tumble her in an alley … nor in this Godforsaken brig . |
10 | Ron Evans had the idea that we should interview her in a terrace street that bore more than a passing resemblance to the famous TV set . |
11 | He might want her as a doctor , but as a woman , it seemed , she was a disposable commodity . |
12 | She smiled as her father began : he would have been happy being a teacher ; he had often told her that and at one stage — in the nature of parents ' bequeathing unfulfilled ambitions to their children — he had hoped that Mr Fenton might consider her as a pupil teacher ( just for the mornings , of course , he needed her the rest of the day ) . |
13 | I 'll do her in a minute . |
14 | In a couple of weeks I 'll send her on a vacation . |
15 | I 've told her I 'll see her at the funeral , though I suppose it wo n't be for a while . |
16 | I 'll see her in the morning and . |
17 | I 'll charm her from the tree . |
18 | how she speaks no he , he might ban her from the shop if she , if she keeps Well you know she 's called her all sorts of things in front of people . |
19 | Long before she left school , Clara discovered that whatever negligent indifference might greet her in the bosom of her family , she was capable of arousing strife in breasts other than those of Miss Haines and Mrs Hill . |
20 | Guessing what might greet her in the canteen , she opted for sandwiches in the laboratory , but because today no one else on the team was prepared to forgo his lunch-hour proper she was on her own until she was interrupted . |
21 | She was n't scared of the company who might join her on the journey , for fright was not a condition she admitted ; she only wanted to study her surroundings without discretion , and such intensity made strangers feel uneasy . |
22 | I 'll murder her in a minute , thought Dolly . |
23 | Make Sheila a wondrous cup of 99 tea — that 'll have her over the moon in seconds . |
24 | So I 'll take her to the doctor . |
25 | We 'll take her to the hospital . ’ ’ |
26 | She 'll be busy with photographers and fittings for the next few days and I 'll join her after the show . ’ |
27 | ‘ I 'll clap her in the guardhouse when she does arrive , ’ said Joe . |
28 | As I looked at her , I thought of her shrinking , like someone in a fairytale , and how one day I might hold her in the palm of my hand with her little voice squeaking commands at me as if she was a mouse I 'd picked up in the garden . |
29 | She 'll give a pound coin to one of the tinkers ’ children when there 're dozens of them running round , and she 'll let them see she 's got lots more pound coins , and then she has to give them all one or they 'll bang her on the head and take them . ’ |
30 | Or they might put her on a prison ship to Australia , as they 'd done with two girls from St Jude 's a couple of months ago , because — on those farms where the transported convicts worked all chained together — there was a shortage of women . |