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

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1 It was quite unlike Ace to have left her to carry her own baggage , but of course he 'd had a hard race .
2 ‘ Three of them raped her , one first forced his hand into her at knifepoint and then made her lick her own blood .
3 are provided by a range of resources available to the learner , permitting her to find her own answers .
4 Tell her to find her own dybbuk , I snarl into Rainbow 's ear .
5 Although she dislikes her father 's will — not to let her choose her own husband — she has no intention of rebelling against it .
6 Rachaela allowed her to choose her own colours .
7 Legally this entitled her to choose her own curators — which in this case meant her regent .
8 They had not even let her keep her own loneliness but had intruded on it .
9 It horrified her to hear her own voice screaming at her husband for his indolence but she could not help herself .
10 The feminist arguments in favour of dialogic forms of language use helped her to clarify her own reasons for employing discursive metaphor and parody , and the gendering by feminists of the notion of the ‘ bad copy ’ enabled her to incorporate her own techniques of mis-representation into a readily recognizable social context .
11 Let her have her own way ? ’
12 I could n't let her have her own way every time , however , otherwise she 'd end up training me !
13 The tendency to judge a woman 's worth , or for her to judge her own worth , by her appearance , was by no means new .
14 He was the only brother who allowed her to live her own life .
15 It 's best to let her go her own way .
16 His absences , and an impending change , forced her to face her own feelings .
17 That was another thing — it did n't help her to maintain her own sense of proportion when the rest of the world treated Luke Hunter as if he were some kind of royalty …
18 I took her through school , I sent her to college , I married her off and then I made her take her own life .
19 Charlotte could imagine her discussing her own imperfections , if the subject should arise , with the same critical precision .
20 The feminist arguments in favour of dialogic forms of language use helped her to clarify her own reasons for employing discursive metaphor and parody , and the gendering by feminists of the notion of the ‘ bad copy ’ enabled her to incorporate her own techniques of mis-representation into a readily recognizable social context .
21 A sense of her own importance , which survived despite the sadnesses of her adult life and prompted her to tell her own story at such length , is summed up in her quotation of a relative 's comment on her autobiography , ‘ it was not writ as if a weak woman might have done it , but might have become a divine . ’
22 ‘ I hope we 'll allow her to make her own mistakes , ’ says Kathie .
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