Example sentences of "he have [verb] she to " in BNC.

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1 As she stared into her bemused eyes , he slowly smiled , and in that moment she would have committed murder if he 'd asked her to .
2 He 'd mutilated her to the point of death but — being a Buddhist — he had n't killed her .
3 Maggie gazed anxiously up at the sky as she and Nevil emerged from the Sauchiehall Street picture house that he 'd taken her to .
4 He 'd taken her to church , he 'd taken her to lunch and she had n't been particularly gracious about any of it .
5 He 'd taken her to church , he 'd taken her to lunch and she had n't been particularly gracious about any of it .
6 He 'd taken her to dinner at The Black Dog and through him she 'd spent Christmas at Laura 's .
7 Like that time he 'd taken her to Dublin , one blustery day in February of 1821 .
8 He 'd taken her to a pub — The Crumpled Horn — before walking to the park .
9 He 'd introduced her to Diane about half an hour before .
10 He was confident he 'd brought her to the stage where he could lay her .
11 She thought of what he 'd said about New England that day he 'd brought her to Rome , and how arrogantly she 'd reacted .
12 Underneath he 'd expected her to be hard and dry , but she was very soft and moist .
13 Penry was tactful enough to leave her to her own devices once he 'd directed her to a chemist .
14 For Rachel , who had never before experienced such intensity of feeling , it was as if he 'd transported her to another world — a world where every sensation was heightened , every touch the prelude to yet more delight as he explored and worshipped every inch of her body before taking her to the peak of fulfilment .
15 If he 'd got her to that state , why was she drinking coffee ?
16 He was sorry that he had criticized her to himself , for hiding in the kitchen , for not being attractive .
17 He had wanted her to be able to keep her illusions .
18 She was glad she had the stone , when he came into the byre ; she was waiting for him as he had asked her to , she had made her way across the orchard in the fresh blue morning and let herself in through the wooden door by lifting it off its hinges , since the bolt had rusted fast long ago , and she had looked up at the full moon of the sky in the chimney hole at the centre of the round shelter 's roof , and with her stone which was sharp as a shearing knife with a bright , honed blade the marks of the whetstone were still visible in pale striations like scouring tracks — she scraped her name into one of the stones on the interior , as many others had done before her , in tall shapely capitals , the only letters she knew .
19 He had first of all , as if in some extraordinary dream , after struggling through the dark tunnel , seen her in bed , seen her dark bright eyes , reflecting the candlelight , gazing calmly at him ; and he had imagined her to be a child , a boy .
20 There were things he consciously noticed about people which he brought to mind long after he had ceased to watch them , but now he noted for the first time that she had very small feet — they could have belonged to the oriental he had imagined her to be through the sun haze .
21 A moral is drawn advising husbands : ( Do just as Hain did with his wife , who would only ever show him the slightest respect , until he had beaten her to the core . )
22 It was true , she felt , for in the heat of the moment a voice was warning her that he was only moved by desire now because she had n't fallen at his feet when he had followed her to London .
23 It was only when the colours gave way to plain gold before subsiding into diminishing fountains of silver that she realised she had moved closer to Rune , seeking instinctive protection against the sharp noise of the exploding rockets and that he had gathered her to his strong male body , pinning her to his side by the power of his arm , his hand firmly pressed against her waist .
24 It is implicit from her statement that , according to her , Mr. Steed , too , had not told her that he had appointed her to be his attorney .
25 Her desperation to flee seemed faintly ridiculous now , but she stiffened her failing resolve with the reminder that he had tracked her to Glenshee , giving her no say whatsoever in the matter .
26 When she had protested to Lord Wardley , who was chief billeting officer for that part of Northumberland , he had referred her to a minion who , in turn , had taken great pleasure in pointing out that she could , if she preferred , have some evacuees from Gateshead but , either way , her spare room could not remain empty when everyone was required to make a war effort .
27 And even when , in the end , he had sent her to London , to her uncle Orrin , after one last , disastrous , raging tempest , he had managed her physical transference from the United States to England , but her will had remained unbroken .
28 ‘ She told me her brother held his castle for the Empress , that he had sent her to Gloucester , that she was estranged from him . ’
29 The man was a demon and he had disturbed her to the depths of her being .
30 Then last night he had taken her to St Bartholomew 's Hospital .
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