Example sentences of "would [verb] her [prep] the " in BNC.

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1 I said I 'd see her after the weekend and shouldered my bag .
2 She dressed without disturbing her , and left a note saying she 'd meet her at the Kitty Kat Club that night .
3 Christine I said we 'd meet her by the baked beans so
4 She 'd been certain he 'd take her into the darkness and privacy of the back close .
5 When you found one you wanted you 'd take her into the centre for a dance , ’ he says .
6 Her reaction was as though he 'd hit her in the face , then she recovered , left the room and walked into the kitchen at the end of the hall .
7 The court had been told that Mrs McWilliams had suffered severe brain damage which would affect her for the rest of her life .
8 She looked at Sophie 's stricken face and added , ‘ He told her that if she gave them some garbled story he would sack her on the spot .
9 Although he felt sure he would win her in the end , he was annoyed at her continuing coyness .
10 Neither of them knew her well , but they would recognise her as the secretary of someone important in the administration .
11 Faintly disappointed , she emptied her lungs and resumed the walk which would bring her to the main gate .
12 She imagined that to walk that track , and to climb the rough hewn rock around the mouth of the cave , would bring her to the top of the canyon .
13 She had thought then he would bring her into the shop , as he had herself , and trained her into the business , not only the confectionery and tobacconists , but the little factory across the yard where they made most of their boiled sweets and toffee .
14 She might feel compelled to attack him physically at any moment and he was alarming enough to convince her that he would lift her in the air , shake her like a rag doll and toss her over a crag .
15 She had n't guessed it would land her in the thick of a family feud .
16 Her brain raced over and over what her mother would say , how awful she would feel , what she ought to do , until she felt that the movement in her head would spin her off the bed and send her whirling round the room .
17 Small things would make her happy ; one harsh word would send her into the depths of despair .
18 I would follow her around the house , clinging on to her skirt , unwilling to let her out of my sight , and demanding to be fed with some small token such as an apple or a piece of bread .
19 In order to make Victoria known to the people , Conroy would run her around the country on semi-royal tours , after the last of which , in 1835 , she succumbed to typhoid .
20 And was it for this awfulness that she had taken the great jump that would divide her from the rest of her life , that she could never go back to , for this she had put herself beyond the pale and ruined her life ?
21 He wondered if Huddle would use her in the painting of the Visitation he was planning for one of the aisles .
22 Robyn entered the tiny shop and bought at random , grabbing anything that was familiar — an odd assortment of things that would sustain her with the least amount of effort , paying her money to the assistant vaguely , absent-mindedly .
23 No doubt he would see her at the vicarage .
24 This was discussed at length with Janet , after which it was agreed that the therapist would see her for the next 2 months at fortnightly intervals and that no more than one telephone call per week would be acceptable .
25 He would see her in the old holey woollies she wore to bed , rather than an old-fashioned nightshirt .
26 It was doubtful that Lady Claudia would furnish her with the information she needed , no matter how much the family reputation was at stake .
27 If she got another regular customer it would keep her off the streets for a bit .
28 She would run around her pen at such speed that the centrifugal force would keep her on the vertical walls like a Wall of Death rider .
29 He would meet her in the bar around six o'clock .
30 For the Queen to refuse her assent to a measure passed by the two Houses of Parliament would draw her into the realms of political controversy , hence jeopardizing the claim of the monarch to be " above politics . "
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