Example sentences of "[pers pn] have [verb] her [adj] [noun sg] " in BNC.

  Next page
No Sentence
1 Should I have grabbed her this morning ?
2 I wish I had shown her more affection , although I did spend a lot of time collecting scraps of sheep 's wool off the barbed wire for her to put round her corns .
3 But it does n't matter anyway cos I 've give her some money and I 'll give her her other money
4 if that 's not her role , but you 've given her that role .
5 We 've given her enough time to get blasted out of her skull . ’
6 she was taken out of work one morning and now they 've bought her another car and I do n't where it 's happened but somebody 's gone into the back of her
7 Although the monk does not tell the wife where the hundred francs have come from , and creates potential trouble for her by telling the husband that he has paid her this sum , the wife in the Shipman 's Tale is quite the opposite of the foolish , deceived creature that Margery is in Dame Sirith .
8 Ever since he 'd given her that power of attorney she 'd been getting above herself .
9 His voice was deep and soft with memories , so that she felt her heart dip , then beat crazily as she remembered the last time she 'd been involved in his research , when he 'd kissed her that morning .
10 Feeling unutterably guilty , she saw he 'd brought her another drink and a fresh hot-water bottle .
11 What she had now was twice what she had suffered before this — a love so very agonising , a love without hope because someone else had the right and the claim to him now and that was why he had kissed her that way — to let her know how hopeless it all was .
12 He had given her that household , a little society , warming itself in its own glow of virtue , insulating itself from the big bad world ; but within its own limits it had been open and supportive .
13 If Benjamin had given her nothing else in their life together he had given her this child , and for that Sarah would forgive him anything .
14 Anyway , he had given her enough money to have the baby comfortably ; and she had already made up her mind that she was n't going to have it adopted .
15 He had told her that he had wanted her that night at the house , but he needed no words now — his body was evidence enough — and sheets of flame seemed to shoot through her as her arms wound around his neck and she arched against the demanding , hardening muscles .
16 He had warned her that desire was all he had to offer her , and he had probably assumed that his warning had hit home .
17 For about the seventh time Folly walked over to the vase on the mantelpiece which held the flowers he had sent her that morning .
18 Ever since he had spanked her that night in the bungalow at Moascar garrison , she 'd yearned for the cane .
19 She remembered Havvie 's last words when he had left her that afternoon , and knew that what he had said was true .
  Next page