Example sentences of "[pron] [vb past] her [verb] at " in BNC.

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1 my mum told me to wipe some of it , some of it off cos I could n't her shout , I , I , I caught her shouting at my sister , she got really angry with my sister
2 I watched her sipping at the stuff , making faces .
3 So far as I can reconstruct events , I was gazing at the water jug when the exchange started ; I discovered I was smiling when I realized that Anne was watching me ; whereupon I looked at her interrogatively ; she looked at the water jug with a slight frown ; Millie glanced at each of us in turn , then picked up her dessert spoon and studied that instead ; I watched her smiling at the spoon ; which made me start smiling again ; which made Anne start looking at me again ; which … kept us all occupied throughout the main course .
4 And it and this , the one , the last one was just after I left so I did n't know her , I knew her to look at but I did n't know her personally .
5 I saw her looking at him .
6 When Caroline was home on holiday from her boarding school , my eyes used to light up when from my place in the choirstalls I saw her arrive at church .
7 No , not precisely I , I was a bit too young then , I , I remember all the songs about her Amy wonderful Amy and all those and oh and when she married Jim I was very much in but I could n't actually say I remembered her crashing at Walsall The erm you could , yeah , when I came home from work one Monday afternoon my nan said this eighty eight had gone over very low , and we , we heard that they 'd dropped this landmine this same aircraft had dropped this landmine that had gone under the gas holder at the gas works , in Road and the , they had some rescue workers from the A R P to get it out they never even bothered calling for the Royal Engineers , but the situation was that landmines used to come down on parachutes , and they used to slide into places which were inaccessible but anyway , they relied on the local Walsall A R P to get them out .
8 His hair was tousled and he still looked a little sleepy , but he was fully dressed , which made her feel at a distinct disadvantage .
9 We had been going on the idea that whoever killed her lunged at her when she was standing up : a thrust parallel to the ground . ’
10 They found her sitting at the table with the Telegraph , nibbling toast .
11 When they saw her appear at the bedroom window , they could only assume she was all right .
12 And it made her look at Simon again , he was the messenger , he was a link , it had to mean something .
13 He found her sitting at the desk which was quite clear .
14 Jenna moved and he let her go at once , coming lithely to his feet and helping her up .
15 But , flicking her glance away from him when he caught her looking at him , she formed the view that she must have gone a little light-headed with the guilt of her conscience , because it seemed to her that since knowing him she had been visited by one strange thought or feeling after another .
16 It was still , but he sensed her staring at him from out of the darkness of her shelter , and a laboured and painful breathing came from her .
17 First , he saw her looking at him through binoculars , something he would n't have put past a man-hungry shark like Sandra .
18 He wanted her to stay at home and look after the children as much as she did ; he wanted her to be mainly interested in them .
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