Example sentences of "have [verb] her [noun] [prep] the " in BNC.

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1 CAGNEY and Lacey actress Sharon Gless , who is currently in London starring in Misery at the Criterion , has treated her colleagues at the theatre to her favourite Haagen-Dazs ice cream .
2 ‘ She has given her life in the service of our cause . ’
3 Helen Zeitlin , who worked in the haematology unit at the Alexandra Hospital in Redditch for five years , and was dismissed on the grounds of redundancy , has won her appeal against the decision .
4 Anne Cains , a member of Stockton area International Training in Communication has won her heat in the organisation 's national speech competition , and now goes on to compete against five other clubs in the North-East in the regional heats .
5 This is the ruthless side of Kylie , the hard-nosed accountant 's daughter who has exploited her popularity to the hilt and capitalised on her success like no other pop star in the past decade .
6 Since then she has expanded her stock by the embryo transfer technique .
7 Even the most mild-mannered and good-natured mare is likely to approach her dinner bucket with her ears flat on her head , but as soon as she has buried her nose in the oats , she relaxes .
8 Shelley promises to lunch with them once she has got her things from the car .
9 Ironically , it is precisely this religious fervour which has landed her Government in the present mess : not so much mortgage tax relief ( which is limited ) as the failure to tax the unlimited capital gains available from selling the prime family residence .
10 Once she has deposited her clutch in the nest the female has no further interest in it or her eggs .
11 She has devoted her time to the survey of the wreck of an East Indiaman lying off Weymouth ; once captained by William Wordsworth 's brother , the ship went down in 1805 .
12 Labour has at least two good candidates : Mr Harold Walker , deputy to Speaker Weatherill , and Miss Betty Boothroyd , who has proved her competence in the chair and would be acceptable to all parties .
13 Easy Over 's victory at Garthorpe puts him at the head of the area Young Horse title , and Shedid has increased her lead in the mares ' championship .
14 More recently Gallop has remarked her suspicion of the wish to deny sexual difference because it ‘ might be but another mode of denying women ’ , adding : ‘ I distrust male homosexuals because they choose men over women just as do our social and political institutions , but they too share in the struggle against bipolar gender constraints , against the compulsory choice of masculine or feminine ’ ( Thinking through the Body , 1 13 ) .
15 A mother who has put her daughter on the stage and made her into a teenage star is obviously aware that she is moulding something special .
16 A BURGLARY victim whose home has been raided 14 times in three years has screwed her TV to the floor .
17 A NURSE who died of cancer has bequeathed her pony for the use of the terminally ill children she devoted her life to .
18 A NURSE who died of cancer has bequeathed her pony for the use of the terminally ill children she devoted her life to .
19 Perhaps the old gods had been listening , when she 'd made her wish at the Trevi Fountain .
20 Laura 's normally warm , full lips tightened in pain , and she gave a heavy sigh as she recalled Liz 's pale , wan face , so terribly bruised and cut when she 'd visited her cousin in the hospital this morning .
21 They were grappling , and she 'd got her hand on the woman 's windpipe , holding her off , squeezing .
22 I waited until she 'd swung her hips down the road before I went in .
23 She was just about to step under the gushing spray when she realised she 'd left her sponge-bag in the other room .
24 She 'd powdered her face in the lavatory on the train , examining her reflection in the mirror , thinking she was n't bad-looking .
25 With her temperament , surely she 'd have brought the roof in if she 'd discovered her lover in the arms of another woman ?
26 In other incidents she might simply have placed her hand over the child 's mouth or nose , or interfered with its oxygen supply with ‘ dramatic consequence ’ .
27 He would n't have to bear her quips about the unfaithfulness of his wife , but then he did n't have her delightful , amusing letters , either .
28 She might as well have addressed her request to the tablecloth .
29 The likelihood of Britain having to meet her obligations in the Persian Gulf and the Arabian Peninsula increased in step with the raucousness of Radio Cairo 's ‘ The Voice of the Arabs ’ , adjuring all true followers of Islam to oust every vestige of European colonialism from their lands .
30 ‘ THEY keep on writing you off — but they 're wrong , ’ beamed a delighted Roy Inman , the women 's team manager , as Ann Hughes , Britain 's top lightweight , stepped off the mat having won her semi-final at the World Championships here yesterday .
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