Example sentences of "[adv] [verb] her [noun] for " in BNC.

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1 Peggy Ashcroft duly got her gong for playing Lilian , 50 years in the bin , but She 's Been Away was considerably more than a kind of Rain Woman ; a vehicle for acting technique .
2 it is an artists ' book of the first order , the making of which has been managed from beginning to end by the artist herself , thereby satisfying her desire for creative control over every aspect of its production .
3 Anyway we 've only got her word for the whole story .
4 Choosing to turn a blind eye to the unlikely drama that was unfolding a few feet in front of her , she merely expressed her gratitude for the imitation topaz bangle that she 'd just unwrapped , before turning on her heels and heading downstairs to catch the special seasonal episode of Crossroads .
5 When she was fully dressed and made-up , she called Jenny in to do her hair for her .
6 Obviously taking her silence for agreement , he gave a little snort of disgust .
7 At first the Jones said that there was nothing Olwyn liked enough to change her behaviour for and that punishment meant absolutely nothing to her .
8 She was in love with a man who considered her to be lower than the lowest form of human life , yet even that was n't enough to change her feelings for him .
9 Wanda from New Jersey phoned in to say her need for the taste of blood was a clinical necessity without which the withdrawal symptoms were ‘ just awful , ya wouldn ’ wan na go through it Jerry , ’ she told her host .
10 Mrs Coleridge may have felt that the Blue Coat School would best prepare her son for the clerical career John Coleridge had wished him to follow .
11 He would persuade her that he loved her , ask her to promise to run away with him if her father refused his consent to their marriage , and , when he finally asked her father for her hand , threaten him with the prospect of his daughter 's elopement — he and Jared Tunstall both knew how self-willed his daughter was , and that any threat from her would not be idle .
12 He suggested she develop an interest of her own , generously allowing her space for something else , when all her heart and mind was his forever and ever , amen .
13 Devastated , Charles was determined not to lose her love for good .
14 Hyacinth , who could not catch her breath for excitement , found herself in the arms of the Prime Minister .
15 From a traditional Labour background , my mother rejected the politics of solidarity and communality , always voted Conservative , for the left could not embody her desire for things to be really fair , for a full skirt that took twenty yards of cloth , for a half-timbered cottage in the country , for the prince who did not come .
16 What woman , in fact , however firm her beliefs , would not sacrifice her religion for her children ?
17 She has not seen her children for two years .
18 He had no doubt that it was something devious , and her tone indicated she had already made her choice for him .
19 The week of that first production of Luxembourg , Karl had been absolutely beastly to her — really hurtful about her performance as Juliette which , as she was desperately saving her voice for the other productions , she tended to talk her way through .
20 Apart from the fact that she believed her teeth to be on the point of falling out , she had not had her period for several weeks and was afraid that she was barren .
21 Just give her liquids for a time , ’ he said and dropped his professional air .
22 In a postscript Eliza somewhat enigmatically mentions her pregnancy for the first time :
23 Sally-Anne Tunstall , beloved daughter of Senator Jared Tunstall , arguably the richest man in the USA , and his dear wife Mary , niece of Orrin Tunstall , the American ambassador , society beauty , heiress , spoiled child of fortune , who had once thought that the world was her ball to play with , sat on her bed in an East End attic , dressed in her skivvy 's clothing , grieving because she could not consummate her love for a poor doctor who had renounced the world over which she had once reigned .
24 They did not share her enthusiasm for peace and space and wide skies .
25 She could n't recall stirring but when she came to the end of the journal and looked up , bemused and far away , not recognizing her surroundings for a while , the room was faintly glowing with fire and candlelight and the sky beyond the windows was inky blue .
26 One could scarcely blame her parents for disliking the connection . ’
27 She wanted somehow to have her mother for herself , but only so that she could reject her herself .
28 It was Paul 's obsessive jealousy which had diseased and finally destroyed her feelings for him , even though it was an emotion she had never fully understood — until now .
29 Nigel rather admired her talent for symbolism .
30 Maud salvaged him as usual by noticing nothing , and he mistakenly respected her instinct for dealing with his doldrums .
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