Example sentences of "she [vb past] [vb pp] [pers pn] [adv] [conj] " in BNC.

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1 Erm and then what he did was , he they went through it together and he showed her what to do and she followed him and and as she did things right he praised her and gave her feedback and said she 'd done it correctly and then then when there were things did n't understand she questioned him and then he clarified her .
2 She 'd done it before and she could do it again , especially as so much was at stake .
3 She 'd visited him regularly when he was in prison ; but he could see as the months went by that whatever that special something they 'd had , it was withering away .
4 As he 'd left she 'd kissed him briefly and smiled .
5 Hardly surprising , since she 'd played it non-stop since her Lucy dream , wept to it , soaked it in until it was her heartbeat , floated on the cloud of its beauty all through the Lucyless days .
6 There were several alterations in ink ; she 'd changed it again since he 'd last looked .
7 She 'd got it more than Bill 's got it .
8 ‘ God , ’ her husband said , whenever she 'd brought him home before her father died , ‘ what a bloody awful climate … ’
9 They , they left here erm about half past eight , twenty to nine and they got to about half way they had n't been gone twenty minutes and I thought , oh she 's left her photographs , she had to get four passport photographs and she 'd left them here and I thought we 'd send them , send them to her and she did n't like them you see , but she 'd have them .
10 She directed her eyes to his , secretly willing him to see the truth that had nothing to do with her partner or Maria Luisa — the truth that she had loved him then and still did .
11 She had warned him beforehand that she could n't sing , he recalled .
12 And the fact that she had sent him away before he 'd had time to betray her was cold comfort , set against the enormity of that loss .
13 For over a year she had been cutting out coupons from magazines and sending off for make-up samples that she had kept hidden in a small suitcase in the boathouse ; since her grandmother 's death she had brought them indoors and experimented openly , primping all day long , leaving streaks of grease everywhere , on the table cloth , on the bathroom shelves .
14 She had passed him once or twice , fleetingly , in the corridor , when all he had subjected her to was a brief ‘ good morning ’ .
15 She had described them earlier and I had known what she meant .
16 In a few moments she had finished it all while Tom All Alone watched her with obvious delight .
17 She had known him then and she knew his reputation now .
18 That must be disturbing him greatly ; for , after all , though the Rabbi was not her blood relation and she had known him only since her marriage , even for her it was an intolerable wrench .
19 Breeze 's cake looked very inviting , as she had iced it carefully and written ‘ Good Luck ’ on it , in pink .
20 She had told him then that her body was all she had to offer a man .
21 She knew , for she had told him so that first night , that her situation , alone , unchaperoned , unprotected — and that was the worst of it ! — laid her open to advances .
22 She had told him once as they lay at peace in bed that the sleep after childbirth , an unconsciousness that might only last a split second , was the most complete sleep she had ever known and when you woke from it you felt you had been elsewhere for a hundred years .
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