Example sentences of "she have [vb pp] [pers pn] to " in BNC.

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1 She was always a busy , tidy little girl , going around the house at night making sure all the curtains were drawn and tucking up the zoo of small furry animals which crowded her bed — she has kept them to this day .
2 She sits and watches , and they do not even realize that she has provoked them to it .
3 I 've got this feeling that she has given it to Sophie
4 And she has assigned them to me .
5 Since he has offered her the role of Claudia Cohn-Casson , she has introduced him to journalists , script writers and directors .
6 She thought he must be disappointed that she was n't going home , and realised in dismay that she 'd wanted him to be glad to know she was staying .
7 I heard that she 'd followed you to Sydney . ’
8 She 'd made it to her bedroom door before Guy 's voice called after her .
9 But , still the same , Fabia felt hot by the time she 'd made it to her room , so went and took a shower and changed her clothes and supposed , since it had to be lunchtime , that she should set about getting a snack of some sort .
10 When they emerged forty minutes later from the second-hand shop she 'd taken him to , he wore a tweed suit , laced boots , a heavy overcoat almost ankle-length , gloves and a trilby hat .
11 Erm and then that person she 'd sold it to she knew their address .
12 There , she 'd admitted it to herself .
13 and she 'd offered it to Maureen three months before and Maureen turned it down , and they went mad they said you little creep Jan , little bloody sneak
14 That she 'd introduced him to the Fletchers to keep him there … well , she deserved it .
15 Those nights of passionate improvisation after she 'd introduced me to her two friends from Peredelkino , the writers ' village .
16 She 'd expected it to be more sumptuous than it was .
17 She 'd taken him from the town and the friends that he knew and she 'd brought him to this great , dusty mausoleum of a place where he did n't even like to run around because the echo of his footsteps sounded too much like someone faceless who was following too close .
18 Could she have treated him to similar displays of ill will as she showed her daughter ?
19 The applicant sought judicial review of the decison of the Director of the Serious Fraud Office on 26 June 1991 , in the course of criminal proceedings against the applicant , to seek to enforce his compliance with the requirement contained in a notice issued pursuant to section 2 of the Criminal Justice Act 1987 to attend at her offices and answer questions or otherwise furnish information in respect of her investigation of the applicant alone , afer she had caused him to be interviewed under caution on three occasions and thereafter charged him with an offence , at a time when and in circumstances whereby ( a ) the applicant 's application for legal aid had not yet been granted and he had neither legal advice nor legal representation available to him ; ( b ) the Director had stated that she would not cause the applicant to be further cautioned in compliance with Code C , paragraph 16.5 of the current Codes of Practice issued pursuant to the Police and Criminal Evidence Act 1984 .
20 She had unbuttoned him to his waist , and pulled his shirt and vest out of his trousers , before she spoke .
21 He had n't been there that morning and now she had run him to earth in the café .
22 She had warned him to be wary of the coarse and petty jealousies of common people .
23 She had invited them to lunch as a silent farewell .
24 She 'd become accustomed to his remarks about her unwanted presence , but she had believed him to be resigned for the time being to having her around .
25 To be fair , she could n't recall actually hearing him say the boat was his , but he certainly had n't corrected her when she had assumed him to be the owner .
26 She 'd been very positive about that , not just here in the car , but she had said it to me in the bedroom while I was packing her things and she was still in a mentally uninhibited state .
27 For some perverse reason she had wanted him to be annoyed .
28 Well , she had wanted him to be hopping mad the next time she saw him , and she was pretty sure she 'd succeeded .
29 Her own childhood had been lived on the margins : she had wanted theirs to be calm , to be spared the indignities of fighting unnecessary territorial and social wars .
30 She had wanted it to .
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