Example sentences of "[conj] she [is] [adv] [prep] a " in BNC.

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1 Pat has got a second class going , for the elderly at the Newquay Day Centre ( where she is up against a simultaneously running Bingo session ) , and would now like to introduce a recreational and/or breathing class to her locality .
2 While I am not denigrating individual interpreters working for the immigration service or the Home Office , many of whom work extremely hard and do a very good job , it is essential that those seeking political asylum have an absolute guarantee that the person doing the translating is independent , is fully aware of the importance of an asylum application , is fully familiar with the cases and is somebody whose background has been inquired into to make sure that he or she is not in a position to infiltrate the immigration service and pass information back to the regime from which the individual may be fleeing , thus putting their family at risk .
3 Unlike a real victim , the interview underdog needs to remember that he or she is also in a position to evaluate .
4 Just when that dream person is deciding to redial your number he or she is in for a surprise — the second sitting has moved in on your table .
5 He finds time to talk to her and tell her what 's going on so that she 's never at a loss to deal with any situation .
6 Mr Harvey does want to know about it if she goes into Lexington — that 's our nearest town — but then someone has to drive her there and back , so she 's never without an escort .
7 and Catherine now , Catherine is ideal because she opens her double doors and she 's out into a garden space you know ?
8 But she 's very like a lot of women I know , who have scarves knotted on their shoulders , and who know the difference between collagen and silicone , and who kiss Jasper Conran at parties . ’
9 Yeah , I ca n't even think of any nurses at the hospital , Louise her little one 's three but she 's more like a five year old
10 You will no doubt have been assisting her in basic matters connected with the running of her home while she is still in a state of shock following her husband 's death , for at this point even the most capable women sometimes find day-to-day planning and decision-making very hard to cope with and need to be eased gently back into their normal routine .
11 She prefers the auditorium , even when she is there in an official capacity , as John Young , chairman of the National Hospital , discovered to his dismay .
12 Orders which allow a wife to remain in occupation of the marital home until her youngest child leaves , in effect , put off her housing problems until middle age , when she is often without an income or sufficient capital to make continued owner-occupation a realistic alternative .
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