Example sentences of "that she [vb mod] be [vb pp] " in BNC.

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1 She need n't have worried that she would be recognized .
2 That might in itself imply that she felt for some reason that she would be suspected , or perhaps she knew who the killer was and preferred to keep quiet .
3 They feared that she would be seen as ( indeed is ) abrasive and lacking compassion .
4 ‘ At one point when my mother was ill , the district nurse refused to enter her home and treat her , for fear that she would be contaminated and consequently place her other patients in danger . ’
5 She smiled dazzlingly at the little reporter and hoped that she would be referred to as ‘ charming ’ .
6 Her friends in the West were told that she would be beaten until they stopped publicizing her case .
7 I should have knelt beside her and put my arms around her and promised her that she would be freed from the hell of anhedonia , and that there really was a God and that she did have the strength to tear herself free from cocaine , as others had freed themselves , and I should have assured her that there was true happiness without a drug , but I did not know her well enough to embrace her , so I just let her weep as the sun streaked up in glory from the east .
8 ‘ Well , at least you 'll have someone to meet you at Euston , ’ Rose said softly to Maggie who already knew that she would be met .
9 She had received a note that morning while breakfasting at ‘ Mon Repos ’ from Sir Charles Webb-Bowen no less , telling her that she would be called upon to speak third in favour of the motion : ‘ That this Conference believes that better public and press relations would enable Government and Party to get its message across to the public more effectively . ’
10 At the police station , she said , she was told first that she would be charged with assault and then that she would be charged with disorderly behaviour .
11 At the police station , she said , she was told first that she would be charged with assault and then that she would be charged with disorderly behaviour .
12 He prayed that she would be forgiven for being herself and following her nature .
13 In the company of and from the Key Street Office , I attended the funeral and an address given by a friend and neighbour paid a glowing tribute to recalling how much she enjoyed life and that she would be missed by her many friends .
14 Susanna Wesley spoke with her daughter in October and prayed that she would be given true repentance , ‘ without which I desire to see her face no more ’ .
15 In the case of this well-liked fatherly brigadier , it was common knowledge that , although he would accept his chauffeuse 's six shillings , he would then pay all other expenses in order that she would be wined , dined and accommodated in the same style as himself .
16 Ms Donovan worked for a local authority and , during the course of disciplinary proceedings , was told that she would be permitted to terminate her employment on the last day of the year if she so wished .
17 She went to the Labour Bureau and the clerk there told her that she would be passed fit for clerical work and sent her to the Ministry of Defence Office .
18 In March 1991 , although Aquino confirmed that Imelda Marcos continued to be banned from the country , she suggested that she would be allowed to return at some point in order to face corruption charges .
19 She had arranged to meet Luke in the bar for a drink , and she hoped that he had a dinner engagement so that she would be left to her own devices afterwards .
20 She hated it , and she was afraid of it , because she doubted her power to escape ; even after two years in London , she still thought that her brain might go or that her nerve might snap , and that she would be compelled to return , feebly , defeated , to her mother 's house .
21 ‘ She felt pressurised that she would be expected to be as career-orientated as she was before having the baby , ’ says Sandra , ‘ so she works with us because we are relaxed about it — if she does n't want to work on Wednesday , that 's fine , she can work on Friday instead .
22 If she had known that she would be offered the opportunity of fighting Finn all round the valley , she would never have planned her picnic .
23 France 's commitment of troops to the Indochina war brought fears that she would be outnumbered by German forces in the European theatre .
24 Some expressed the fear that she would be humiliated if she carried on , or that even if she won she would be leading a demoralised party .
25 She played with the choices during the remaining days allowed her , knowing in her heart that she would be forced to take the safe path into the civil service .
26 The Galiaras were told that she would be put on a plane at 3.30 pm .
27 And told to turn up the next morning , waited another four hours , finally a patient who 'd had an operation for a serious gall bladder operation two days before hand was kicked out of his bed and sent home so that she would be put in the bed , given the operation !
28 Deep down , he knew that she would be put off by any direct approach .
29 McLeish , shaking his head , rang Catherine and broke it to her apologetically that she would be required for the afternoon .
30 His next letter offered her marriage to save her from the dreadful future of stripping off that she would be subjected to otherwise .
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