Example sentences of "she have [adv] a [adj] " in BNC.

  Next page
No Sentence
1 Tea went through all its stages — scones ( I fancy ) , gingerbread ( which was a success ) , and small cakes with chopped walnut on which were rather good , but I do n't think they appealed to her — she has n't a sweet tooth , I think …
2 She has also a splendid charwoman .
3 She has also a teething baby , pinched and veined and smelling of milk .
4 I loved him , as much as an alien can entertain love for a being on a green planet where she knows she has only a certain time .
5 At least the first time , she 'd only a vague notion of what might lie ahead .
6 She had either a split skirt or split dress .
7 The initial shock must have been terrible , but in fact she had rather a good war .
8 She had rather an athletic body .
9 She explained to Farmer Plant how she used the outjutting twin branches of the tree as her pony , as she had n't a real one to ride , and how she was working for the Pony Rider badge .
10 Ruth and she had instead a disarmed neutrality .
11 She had also a gallant and generous heart wide-open to affection .
12 She had quite a long and happy chat with the ‘ witch ’ before she left for home .
13 However , on a Dow-Stoker Returners programme she discovered that she had quite a strong numerical ability , and decided that she would like to work in an accounts department .
14 If you look at her face she had quite a pointed nose
15 She had quite a few gadgets .
16 I have a niece who erm she had quite a few , she 's won several times .
17 She had quite a large party staying in the village and so we just gathered in the kitchen and talked .
18 She had perhaps a few spoonfuls of oil ; she was told to pour those minute contents of her jar into jars that might have held a hundred times as much as she had .
19 An exhausted Miranda found that instead of having more time , she had almost a full-time job keeping present and future shareholders informed and happy : she prepared official reports , gave institutional and pension-fund presentations , attended city lunches , and made time in her overfilled schedule for the financial press .
20 A second later she had fallen to the ground , her hair covering her eyes so that she had only a vague impression of the man bending over her .
21 It was my good fortune to see a lot of Emily Carr and to be counted as a friend , for she claimed she had only a few .
22 ‘ I think ’ , wrote Baxter , ‘ that she had scarce a pleasanter time in her life than while she was with me there . ’
  Next page