Example sentences of "she [verb] they [vb past] " in BNC.

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1 She thinks they got her rabbit and was worried for her children 's safety .
2 She says they had the house raised off it 's foundations a while ago … maybe that 's protected them this time .
3 She says they condemned her to a lifetime of pain and disability .
4 and she says they got sick of 'em cos they had everything
5 She says they heard a series of loud bangs .
6 She says they failed Sharon , by not passing on warnings .
7 Mrs Willies-Williams is fighting for damages from the National Trust because she says they wrecked her business .
8 She says they told her to watch out .
9 She says they asked where her money was .
10 She says they used her orchard as a toilet , and their property was invaded night and day .
11 She says they did n't bother that they were pensioners .
12 She says they did n't bother that they were pensioners .
13 She says they worked closely with the Hindu community in Cheltenham who introduced them to a teacher from Birmingham who taught them .
14 She says they bought them all from Birmingham — many are for weddings and rituals .
15 Well then th they must have been she said they 'd been concerned all day .
16 They had looked forward to seeing her but when she came they did n't know what to say .
17 When he did not return for quite a while , she guessed they had been talking to each other about her .
18 When Mary I married Philip of Spain she decreed they ruled England jointly , and for the next few years until Elizabeth came to the throne the following strange convention was adopted for recording their regnal years : On 17 March 1649 the monarchy was abolished and during the period until parliamentary government was overtaken by the Restoration , English official documents were dated by the year of grace .
19 Even as she watched they disappeared over the edge , leaving her in a watery isolation .
20 When she found a lot more shoots in different places , she decided they needed more air and light , so she began to pull out the thick grass around them .
21 There was no tea break but Mr John and a woman , who she thought might have been a chaperone , would go into a little room at the end , where she fancied they had a nip or two .
22 She 'd reverted to her glasses because she thought they made her look older and more respectable , somehow , the way people wanted a doctor to look .
23 As she uttered these words she thought they sounded snide and insinuating , sarcastic even , though she had not meant them like that .
24 Just when she thought they 'd got away from it , change and disruption had caught up with them again .
25 She thought they 'd better have something to drink so she got some sherry , then she was worried because she 's only got those little glasses you know , little tumblers , and she says they 're only for whisky . ’
26 She thought they had started from different points , although she had wanted to marry him after only a few meetings because he ‘ felt good to be with ’ .
27 Mrs Hirst , who is the chairman of a local disabled charity group , believed these steps were important , but she thought they did not go far enough .
28 She did n't know their names ; she would n't have recognized their faces ; but she knew they existed .
29 She knew they mated for life , and though she did not think much of married bliss , yet she approved of constancy .
30 She knew they 'd been on the verge of drawing at least a little closer to each other , yet she had been the one to ruin the opportunity .
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