Example sentences of "she [coord] [noun prp] have been " in BNC.

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1 She and Sheila had been very close at school up to the Fifth Form .
2 It was only sexual jealousy that he felt , after all , because he had convinced himself that she and Florian had been lovers and probably would be again when this was over .
3 Alix admitted what Liz already knew , that she and Sebastian had been less than happy , that the idyll had been less golden than it looked .
4 Now Marc Alexander Vila moved closer , and she found herself surreptitiously pressing back against the stone wall of the turret room she and Peter had been allotted , trying to pretend she did n't care while her breath went ragged with apprehension .
5 She and Jake had been driving back to Lomond View after accompanying Kirsty back to school when Jake had swivelled round in his seat to inform her ,
6 She and Implexion had been conducting a casual affair for years ; she knew him better than anyone .
7 In desperation she tells Fairfax that she and Tepilit have been lovers .
8 She and Lewis had been out for a meal the night before .
9 It had come her way because , leaving them in charge of Mrs Gracie , Dinah had gone for diversion to what she expected to be a dull sewing-meeting in the Islington church where she and Paul had been married .
10 Her father was a rich and respected solicitor — not quite the right breeding , socially speaking , in County Westcommon , but Lalage 's charm and silly looks guaranteed her welcome in many houses to which her mother had never been invited : she and Nicandra had been " best friends " at their English school .
11 At school she and Adam had been the different ones , the Demdykes — the ones with a dead mother and a crazy father .
12 Everyone knew she and Ryan had been living together , and it was easy to jump to the wrong conclusions .
13 And thus , when her father 's ghastly illness had first been diagnosed , and had then continued on its remorseless path , she 'd only discovered — when it was far too late — that she and Ross had been growing steadily and disastrously apart .
14 She and Sarah had been indignant and sad to see a picture of Emperor Haile Selassie of Abyssinia on the Pathe News Gazette at the cinema after Mussolini had invaded his country .
15 She talked freely about the many young men she and Sarah had been out with , and sometimes had the women in fits of laughter , but she never mentioned John .
16 She and Sarah had been to the cinema the previous night and when the air raid warning sounded some people had left but most stayed .
17 She and Sarah had been sitting under the balcony and when the warning was given they moved forward but continued to enjoy the film in which John McCormack sang Believe Me If All Those Endearing Young Charms and The Dawning of the Day .
18 She supposed most normal people in a situation like the one she and Alan had been in all day , would have ended up in bed together , here in this comfortable bed at Rose Cottage .
19 She 's in April , she and Anthony had been to Florence for four days .
20 For the first time she regretted being an identical twin ; none of this would have happened if she and Dana had been ordinary sisters , but then you might never have met Roman Wyatt , her subconscious whispered .
21 Constance promised that she would , but she was so afraid of the outcome that she knew she could n't , not until she and Ludovico had been married and she was beyond her mother 's power .
22 She and Jeremy had been seeing each other fairly regularly , but he was an investment banker and they were both so hectically involved in their jobs that they 'd opted for casual , no-strings dating almost by mutual consent .
23 He was sprawled in an armchair opposite and the expression on his face clearly told her that he knew exactly what she and Jennifer had been discussing .
24 She and Edmund had been doomed from the start .
25 Everyone knew that she and Tony had been married .
26 She and Phillip had been good friends since the 40s .
27 She could wake up and find that it was still the night of their parents ' wedding , that only that afternoon she and Stephen had been on the train .
28 Since the outbreak of the war Harriet had rather prided herself that she and Tom had been able , for the most part , to manage their property by themselves and certainly the employment of any domestic help at this juncture seemed a luxury to which she was almost ashamed to admit .
29 If she and Tom had been two men he would have been discretion itself , she thought .
30 At first she and Ernest had been completely mystified , for how could some solicitors they had never met have any news for them which would be ‘ to their advantage ’ ?
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