Example sentences of "to see her [prep] [art] " in BNC.

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1 Her mother was n't at home , and her father wanted to see her to the car , which was parked in the street .
2 The daughter no longer had to provide care but said ‘ I merely go to see her for a chat and the company nowadays ’ .
3 He would take frustrating and puzzling journeys on the serpentine British railways to see her for a snatched fraction of a weekend in a provincial rep .
4 Then her father and two brothers will be able to see her for the first time in seven months .
5 Then her father and two brothers will be able to see her for the first time in seven months .
6 It had indeed been , as it happened , impossible for him to see her at the times she suggested .
7 Yes , it was real , it was happening : sitting with her back straight and her head up in the carriage on the way back , she thought how proud her father would have been to see her at the centre of all this pomp and splendour , and found herself mentally comparing his craggy looks and red beard with Joãs clean-shaven face and small , manicured hands .
8 ‘ I was glad to see her at the pictures with you , ’ Anne said .
9 Could I make an appointment to see her at the Education Office to sort out the dinner money debts once and for all — hopefully .
10 And he had probably expected to see her at the shop this morning , while she had been waiting impatiently at his office .
11 If Rohan needed to have a private word with her , why had n't he arranged to see her at the house instead ?
12 Boz is the only one she 'd tell such a thing to , but she 's already told me Boz has n't been to see her since the attack . ’
13 When she spent all night every night watching her clientele , her boys , it was for this ; she was waiting for her chosen ones , the last of her protegés , her perfect couple , her two to see her through the dark times .
14 If only Craig was at her side it would be so different , she needed his strength to see her through the ordeal , not only of the funeral but of the days and weeks that were to come .
15 It was difficult to see her through the dazzling spurts of fire ; she seemed to be less and less there .
16 The stairs were cold and draughty and the light was n't good , but she 'd placed herself so that the agency 's receptionist would be able to see her through the glass-panelled door if she should happen to glance up .
17 Her parents travelled home in the first week of October leaving her with fields enriched by the presence of a few dozen sheep and enough advice to see her through the cow 's first calving and the sow 's first litter .
18 She could not but be gratified and relieved at the possibility of a small sum to see her through the likely lean period before she could get another post .
19 They stood talking a long time at the crossroads before separating but he did n't offer to see her over the weekend .
20 7 It 's terrific to see her without the bars between us. 8 She sits eating the treat food at the opening to the door and looking at me. 9 How does she know to look into my eyes and not at the huge finger next to her .
21 So I would congratulate her on her good prospects as a statesman , or she would warn me of the dangers of dancing all night ; but if the stars looked town they would be no more likely to see her on a rostrum than me on a dance-floor .
22 She now hopes that the world will no longer expect to see her on the arm of her husband , hugging or kissing him in public , behaving like a loving wife .
23 Well , you are unlikely ever to see her on the screen .
24 She did n't care about anything ; she just wanted Meredith to see her on the back of the Prince 's white charger .
25 But when Alice was taken in to see her on the second day , she was sitting up in a swansdown wrap , surrounded by flowers .
26 The fact that ‘ She ’ appears to those privileged to see her as a veiled figure and that her lustrous orbs , dazzling limbs and perfect ankles are revealed with tantalising slowness , has a rather different effect on today 's readers than it no doubt had when the book was first published , very nearly a century ago , in 1887 , to be greeted with a storm of ecstasy or alternatively of appalled disapproval , which lasted for many decades .
27 He hated her so much that he refused even to see her as a person .
28 It would be incongruous to see her as an influence on later writers who may never have heard of her .
29 With the binoculars that they carried , they must have been able to see her from the moment that she set out .
30 He also said that he found his responsibilities ‘ a very great strain ’ , because his aunt was such a difficult , domineering person , and he would like to see her in a Home — partly because she needed more care and more company .
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