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

  Next page
No Sentence
1 Oh here 's another dog I think oh it 's Judy 's , not it 's not hello , have n't seen you for a long time , hello , have n't seen her for a long time , morning , good morning oh she 's a sweetie is n't she ? forgotten her name come and say hello , I have n't seen you for ages , so him once on the , good morning .
2 These are the people who have seen her through the difficult times , who have helped her adjust to the life before her and who have kept her in touch with the real world .
3 I 'd never seen her without a single string of pearls , which she fingered constantly .
4 Physically , she was looking better than Harriet had seen her in a long while .
5 Her limbs were graceful , her whole body proportioned like that of a young goddess ; as for her breasts , an infatuated young man who had seen her in a small part at Robert 's Shield Theatre wrote her a letter quoting the Song of Solomon at length : Asshe threatened to horsewhip him .
6 It was the first time I had seen her in a pale colour — a light grey dress which made her seem shadowy .
7 ‘ I just do n't see her as a full-time mother … ’
8 Let him see her as the successful career-woman she was .
9 I did n't want Mary to go because I thought I would n't see her for a long time , and I ran over to her and pleaded .
10 ‘ From what you 've told me , I do n't think we 'll see her for a long time unless your Mr Wyatt finds them , and while he thinks you are Dana he wo n't be looking very hard , will he ? ’
11 Yes , said Sister , Mrs Downes had been remarkably lucky , really ; and , yes , Sergeant Lewis could see her for a short while .
12 For a long while , I could see her in the rear-view mirror , standing in the dusty road in her long white dress , holding her child and looking after the Felder .
13 It was n't as if he could see her in the flimsy satin nightdress , was it ?
14 Gregory sees her as the prime mover in this , while allowing for the importance of divine intervention in Clovis 's victory against the Alamans .
15 Looking back on the bitter , dangerous adventure he undertook in her service , years later , Hi Ridden still sees her in a romantic light :
16 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 .
17 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 .
18 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 .
19 It was difficult to see her through the dazzling spurts of fire ; she seemed to be less and less there .
20 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 .
21 FERDINAND … . my imagination will carry me To see her in the shameful act of sin … .
22 Charles took to Diana that weekend and began seeing her on a regular basis when they returned to London .
23 Claire saw her as a red blur through the tears .
24 Perhaps if he fancied Perdita he saw her as a potential mother-in-law .
25 Any smoothy who saw her as a soft touch was in for a shock .
26 Those who assumed that the cottage was owned by him , not her , saw her as the unmarried sister , dependent on him for houseroom , companionship , a purpose in life .
27 He saw her through a gilt-framed mirror on the opposite wall , and that first glimpse of her brought him more joy than a dozen Christmases put together .
28 I saw her through an open doorway .
29 One was strange , because it was about an old lady who meant nothing to me at all ; I hardly knew her and only saw her on the rare occasions when I went into her family shop two or three hundred yards from us .
30 Although her maximum grant is only £2,845 a year , the banks still see her as a good catch .
  Next page