Example sentences of "that she [verb] [pers pn] [adv] " in BNC.

  Next page
No Sentence
1 ‘ The beastly old woman has told me , quite bluntly , that she considers me very much an ex -wife .
2 She recognized then that she desired it so — that she would , if she could , make it so .
3 The only difference was that she understood him now .
4 I remember Otto mentioning that she entertained him there with Jean-Claude , and only later moved out into a room over the Café du Coin , to be nearer her ‘ young man ’ .
5 That she achieved it just when the company was set for major expansion , was an accident of timing that Bernard was determined to exploit to the full .
6 All contemporary accounts of Constanze 's character , except those originating from Leopold and Nannerl Mozart ( neither of whom ever really accepted her ) , together with the evidence of Mozart 's own letters to her , confirm that she made him as good a wife as he could have wished .
7 She was still not certain that she believed him now .
8 The Church appeared no longer to be the guiding force that she believed it once had been , and felt it ought still to be .
9 She felt that she knew him already .
10 He was smiling as if he recognized her , and she had a queer , uncanny feeling that she knew him very well …
11 She had badly wanted him to kiss her , of course — so badly that she knew it simply must not happen …
12 Whatever it was , I could no longer complain that she treated me more like a brother than a lover .
13 And with that she stalked off , head held high , and it was only later when she calmed down that she realised he still thought Mick had stayed the night .
14 She was sent the script for one of the episodes — she has never said by whom — and was so enraged by one scene in which the councillor was to have been seen leaving a prostitute 's room doing up his trousers , that she sent it straight to the Postmaster General , the Minister responsible .
15 Not that she left it there .
16 Knew , indeed , that she feared it more than anything else in her life .
17 In spite of her rage with him she admitted that she found him just about perfect to look at .
18 Compared Janet NcCalman alledged charmer and being questioned as to her using of charms confessed that she used one charm for Causing Cows bull ( called eelis dhair ) which she practices by expressing some words over water and that she gave it particularly to one NcAbhrionid in Balulise .
19 Compared Janet NcCalman alledged charmer and being questioned as to her using of charms confessed that she used one charm for Causing Cows bull ( called eelis dhair ) which she practices by expressing some words over water and that she gave it particularly to one NcAbhrionid in Balulise .
20 She admits that she trusted him totally and went along with his judgement — a fact , she tends today to regret somewhat .
21 Not , however , when Charlotte sat opposite him in an eerily empty airport cafe and described her experiences in the United States while gazing at him with an expression implying what he most wanted to believe : that she trusted him unreservedly .
22 She began to take a different route so that she approached her home from the other end of Magdalen Street and avoided a meeting with John .
23 It was a victory for her each time that she wrested him away from his desk and his teleprinter and his uniform .
24 It certainly did n't change the fact that she disliked him intensely .
25 ‘ You can see that she wants you here .
26 ‘ She outlined her regard for the children and made the point that she showed them more attention than the Prince of Wales appeared to . ’
27 And he went to take her by the arm , for he feared that she might fall — only for an even worse horror to grip Sally-Anne , so that she pushed him violently away , quite unable to control herself , stammering , ‘ No — no … ’
28 She went out with him faithfully for several months , and as time went on she found that she liked him both less and more .
29 How if she chooses this moment and this audience to make it known that she visits us only out of pure charity , that what lies in her handsome reliquary is in reality the body of the young man who committed murder to secure her for Shrewsbury , and himself died by accident , in circumstances that made it vital he should vanish ?
30 At least when that happened , she would stop feeling his rejection so poignantly — stop caring about the fact that she disgusted him so much that he did n't want anything to do with her except sexually , and that against his will and to the damage of his self-respect .
  Next page