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Discover LudwigThe phrase "he's got her" is grammatically correct and can be used in written English.
It means that the male subject has possession or control over the female object. Example: - "I can't believe he's got her wrapped around his finger." - "He's got her under his spell." - "Despite their differences, he's got her loyalty." - "He's got her heart and she doesn't even realize it." - "He's got her trust, so she'll do whatever he asks."
Exact(8)
It's going to be a huge accomplishment that her dad's a triple amputee with one arm and he's got her to where she can hunt herself".
He's got her number.
Now he's got her fans geared up all over again.
William, responding to a question, said, "He's got her looks, thankfully".
He disappears with Yara, and he's got her by the throat.
Not only do we get someone coming back from the dead, it's a wife who finds out that her grieving ex has shacked up with one of the "children" for whom he never knew he was responsible AND that he's got her pregnant after years (well, centuries) of them not being able to conceive.
Similar(52)
He hasn't let go of her since he's gotten her".
All he succeeds in doing — in "He and She" — is getting her to read "The Shadow-Line".
She brightened, Dillon said, when he told her that she was getting her home back.
"He's got his hands up there for her now," one officer aboard the helicopter can be heard saying.
A dinner at which he tries to negotiate intimacy with her is a manipulation based on her needing what he's got for her career.
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Justyna Jupowicz-Kozak
CEO of Professional Science Editing for Scientists @ prosciediting.com