Example sentences of "[conj] [verb] she [prep] [art] [noun sg] " in BNC.

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1 At least it was comforting to know that he would n't consider her compliance ‘ cheap ’ or despise her for the speed with which he had been able to seduce her .
2 ‘ I 'll go and collect her , or meet her on the way home .
3 I was thinking maybe next weekend I might or meet her for the day
4 I sometimes did little unexpected kid things out of my tenderness for her , and was always glad to be the one to take up tea for her if she was unwell , and so on , or to help her with the housework when she was servantless .
5 I mean , I might have had to shove the split match heads under Carol 's fingernails , or tie her to a tree and subject her to psychological warfare by , say , reading Hemingway aloud to her .
6 In his absence she 'd been as nervy as a wildcat , jumping a mile every time someone spoke to her or touched her on the shoulder , expecting him to turn up out of the blue as he 'd made a habit of doing .
7 It is , however , the case that the man who approaches the whore as a client , on her terms that is , is usually mocked in the fabliau : see , for example , Le Prestre et Alison , described in Chapter 1 , or La vieille Truande , " The old beggarwoman " , in which an old woman manipulates an attractive young squire into either " embracing " her or carrying her across a river — an act which in fact becomes a physical embrace — to " " la grans risee " " , " the great laughter " , of the witnesses .
8 Tony found that the best thing to do was to put her in the buggy and push her round the town , or take her to the park .
9 God had n't fully maintained His help to keep condescension from her tone or to prepare her for the answer when it came : ‘ Yes , I went to school , ma'am .
10 Something was beginning to happen to her , an excitement , a wildness that caught her by the throat .
11 Anything would have been better than this ice-cold contempt that cut her to the bone .
12 It had been in his eyes when he lay on the bed staring rigidly at the ceiling , a terrifying , heart-rending pain that cut her to the bone .
13 There was a cruel taunt in his voice that cut her to the quick .
14 There was something about Rourke that stirred her in a way no other man had ever done … but , even so , a tiny voice of caution held her back .
15 In recent months the presidential asset has been the subject of some distinctly unflattering news articles , including a long Vanity Fair magazine story that painted her as an autocrat angry with her husband and out of touch with her family .
16 There may still be time to persuade the authorities to relocate her rather than remove her from the wild .
17 Best of all Miss Martineau writes with a wry humour — of the karaoke bar that bans her as a foreigner and then welcomes her lest her Japanese host lose face ; of the popularity of sado-masochistic pornography , but without pubic hair ; of the burglar who first took his shoes off .
18 And that faced her with a course of action which , for some obscure reason , seemed rather distasteful now .
19 The chill of fear and loneliness that had penetrated her very bones was suddenly consumed by the fury that engulfed her like a wave .
20 Ariel , watching , wished that she too could defy the bonds that tied her to the earth , and her blood leapt with Dulé 's ascent .
21 MRS Leona Helmsley , the hotel queen dethroned earlier this year by a New York court that convicted her as a tax cheat , was yesterday sentenced to four years ' imprisonment and fined $7 million ( £4.5 million ) .
22 THE gritty determination that took her to the top as Coronation Street 's Ivy has always been there .
23 She came off the slope at an uncontrollable pace that took her across the clearing and into the trees .
24 Margaret Hughes wept in the backseat of the police car that took her from the court to prison .
25 And he nibbled at her lips again , before catching them in another long exploratory kiss that brought her to a threshold of physical pleasure she had never before experienced .
26 It was being made to feel redundant that brought her to a standstill .
27 A forager learns many things about a food source that aid her in the future , including its colour , shape , odour , location , nearby landmarks , time of nectar production , how to approach , land , enter , and reach the nectar , and so on .
28 What he seemed to see was something else , something that wore her like a shell , and it was walking towards him .
29 Kramarae and Treichler quote Rebecca West 's witty remark , that she is n't sure what a feminist is , she only knows men call her that whenever she does or says anything that differentiates her from a doormat .
30 She felt strangely restless , wanting to throw herself into every small task that awaited her throughout the house .
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