Example sentences of "have [verb] she [adv] [prep] the " in BNC.
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1 | For instance , Charles Harvey has tipped her off about the new motorway but she pretends she does n't know . |
2 | But as the writer Patience Gray , who has made her home in the Mediterranean , points out : ‘ Pounding fragrant things — particularly garlic , basil and parsley — is a quite tremendous antidote to depression … it produces an alteration in one 's being — from sighing with fatigue to inhaling with pleasure ’ . |
3 | Now a widow , Mabel has made her home in the compact whitewashed building , tucked in one of Whitby 's historic yards . |
4 | Her work has taken her all over the world . |
5 | And Carolyn Dalzell , 18 , claims her landlord has thrown her out of the house blaming her for the fire . |
6 | The family has kept her away from the details of the attack . ’ |
7 | And after that we shipped — me and another feller , an Irish feller , a Belfast man — we shipped in an owd schooner called the Mount Blairie : it was an old thing that had been ashore at — in a little shipyard ; and they 'd done her up during the winter to give them men a job . |
8 | Then , deciding she was no political , just another stroppy trucker , they 'd handed her over to the locals , which was a big relief . |
9 | I understand it was your own stupidity in refusing to accept Silas 's ring until he 'd got her out of the house . |
10 | That was all , the slightest touch of his fingers on hers , but she was reminded of that other time he had touched her , when he 'd helped her out of the pool , and now , as then , something inside her responded to his touch . |
11 | Marian I know was Marian Anderson , the black singer , she sang on the steps of the Lincoln Memorial on Easter Sunday morning in 1939 , it was freezing , they 'd locked her out of the concert hall she had booked . |
12 | Actually , I 've heard a little about your relationship from my aunt — like the fact that you refused to accept Silas 's ring until he 'd kicked her out of the house . ’ |
13 | It was as though he 'd kicked her hard in the stomach . |
14 | But he could remember the sound of her voice on the phone that morning , when he 'd called her up from the School , too well . |
15 | You did n't fall in love with someone in the space of a few days , just because you 'd finally succumbed to the lures of sex , or lust , or whatever had overwhelmed her ever since he 'd fished her out of the sea that first night … |
16 | He had n't meant to say it , but it was the effect of the beer and the movement of the ship and her sophistication , all things he could n't cope with together , so he 'd taken her down to the bar and they 'd had a couple more drinks to restore his confidence before the boat docked . |
17 | She would have had to leave her alone in the house , and Nelson Close is n't in the suburbs , is it ? ’ |
18 | She stood up : ‘ No , I did n't ! — So he could n't have done it , could he ? — And before you say owt , he could n't have looked her up in the phone book 'cos she 's ex-directory ! — And anyway , he told me to go round there today and get her to put her money in the bank . |
19 | There could only be one reason why Ross — always such a proud and unforgiving man — would have broken his own self-imposed exile and contacted her ; only one reason why he would have brought her back to the quiet privacy of her own apartment . |
20 | Storming into the restaurant where the Italian and Miss Maughan 's character were dining , he invented some story about having to keep her away from the paparazzi ( which he probably thinks is the coffee you buy in Venice ) and whisked her off her feet back to his place . |
21 | He would have escorted her back to the Old Rectory and then , a minor social obligation performed , turned with relief to walk alone to the abbey , drawing his solitude around him like a cloak . |
22 | After two minutes I believe the butcher would have followed her out of the shop had she beckoned him . |
23 | What I 'm saying is that he would n't have taken her out into the woods . |
24 | Hefty young chap like that could have swatted her out of the way with one hand ! ’ |
25 | He was back in the seat , having kissed her glancingly on the mouth as he swung down into it . |
26 | They can have afforded her little in the way of rent . |
27 | At this time of night , after two days away , I do n't have to drag her immediately off the floor . |
28 | He had taught her much over the years . |
29 | He had hustled her out of the kitchen into the boudoir and kissed her on the lips , slipping his arm round her waist . |
30 | Dinah felt herself trembling ; this was the man who had libelled Paul and herself , had made their early years wretched , had hounded her out of the only world she knew . |