Example sentences of "[pron] she [vb -s] the " in BNC.

  Next page
No Sentence
1 The technical accomplishment with which she plays the music is startling enough , but there is an even more surprising maturity and musicality in her interpretation .
2 In fairness to the mother he should have directed that she be given notice of the foster mother 's application ; had he done so he would have learned — as we have learned from the mother 's statement which clearly should be admitted in evidence before us for this purpose at least — that if the matters to which she spoke were correct ( viz. the foster mother 's preventing her having access to and contact with the children , and allegations which she says the children made to her of their physical and emotional abuse by the foster mother and other members of her ‘ family ’ ) , then the mother 's wishes and feelings were not lightly to be ignored .
3 Since that time she has published four articles in which she discusses the problems women experimental writers face ( 1986d , 1988a , 1989a , 1989c ; see also 1989e ) .
4 In 1985 Brooke-Rose published an article entitled ‘ Woman as a Semiotic Object ’ in which she analyses the ‘ deep , ancient , phallocratic ’ ( 1991a:249 ) structures for which thinkers such as Greimas , Lévi-Strauss , and others have an unconscious nostalgia .
5 The numbers in her text refer to footnotes in which she spears the novelist with chapter and verse .
6 Gwendolen 's first glimpse of Ryelands is also a picture — a ‘ white house … with a hanging wood for a background , and the rising and sinking balustrade of a terrace in front ’ — but this graceful place , despite the warmth and light inside it , is the context in which she faces the chilling implications of ‘ getting her choice ’ .
7 Instead , the teacher reinforces the responsibility which she wants the children to exercise over their own learning , and the support they can offer to one another without needing to turn to her for confirmation .
8 She has given the High Court in London a map marking out an area of several hundred yards around her home from which she wants the man barred .
9 Ms Bonham Carter , 26 , has given the High Court in London a map marking out an area of several hundred yards around her home from which she wants the man barred .
10 The former Dynasty star Joan jetted in from the south of France where she is working on her latest book , My Secrets , in which she discloses the health and beauty tips which keep her looking so young .
11 It is hard to think of any aspect of Gertrude Stein 's Three Lives that has not been covered , except the exploratory and explanatory uses to which she puts the black woman who holds centre stage in that work .
12 That she could deal with the philosophical and ideological issues related to women 's position in the family is evident from the poem ‘ Man the Monarch ’ in which she debunks the view that men 's sovereignty over women derives from Adam :
13 Each character is musically differentiated : the countess has two magnificently melancholic arias in which she laments the loss of her husband 's affection ; the count is portrayed as arrogant , cynical and menacing ; Figaro and Susanna are quick-witted , likeable , scheming and intelligent , able to give as good as they get , but both capable as well of jealousy and emotional suffering ; Cherubino is a confused adolescent who has just discovered sex but does n't know what to do with it .
14 Pamina 's G minor aria ‘ Ach , ich fühls ’ , in which she laments the apparent loss of Tamino 's love , is one of the simplest , yet most heartfelt musical expressions of grief ever penned .
15 ‘ The age at which she has the operation may be left to the woman .
16 For those unable to be so direct , the bed can become , for the angry woman , an arena of struggle , perhaps the only one in which she has the advantage .
17 Biddy Martin contributes a wonderful essay on ‘ Sexual practice and changing lesbian identities ’ , in which she explores the radical and transgressive consequences of the new theory for theories of sexuality and gender , for sexual practice , and for political challenge .
18 MY ATTENTION has been drawn to the letter from Muriel Green ( HAS May 5 ) , chairwoman of the education committee , North Tyneside Council , in which she defends the comprehensive school ideal .
19 Disguised as a page boy albeit an incredibly feminine one she enters the service of Orsino , with whom she falls in love .
20 She will be notified of the decision on her claim as soon as possible , and if by any chance she is not satisfied with it she has the right of appeal to an independent Appeal Tribunal , by writing to the Social Security Office within twenty-one days of its receipt .
21 is that what she does the weekend
22 As an emancipated woman of the 20th century , much of whose life was spent in New England , Yourcenar feels compassion for those whose lives were thwarted by what she calls the philistinism of 19th-century Catholicism , that of her Belgian ancestors in particular .
23 She has sought to highlight the positive ethical and aesthetic implications of Victorian science as they appear in literature ( rather than looking for further ammunition for what she calls the sterile and artificial battle of literature against science ) .
24 Boyd prefers what she calls the ‘ old style of illustration ’ .
25 Boyd prefers what she calls the ‘ old style of illustration ’ .
26 Golding and Middleton ( 1982 ) analysed press reports in their study of attitudes to poverty , and Ferguson ( 1983 ) analysed thirty years ' worth of three women 's magazines as data for her research into what she calls the ‘ cult of femininity ’ .
27 It 'll be part of what she calls the Seybold Marathon Week , coincident with the Boston Marathon and the Distributed Objects Computing Forum and the Executive Forum which she 'll also run .
28 The findings of the male researchers , she claims , are dogged by what she calls the problem of women ‘ whose sexuality remains more diffuse , whose perception of self is so much more tenaciously embedded in relationships with others and whose moral dilemmas hold them in a mode of judgment that is insistently contextual ’ .
29 In GynlEcology , discovering or recovering one 's own self is seen as akin to a process of salvation or religious rebirth , and Daly writes of what she calls the unveiling or unwinding of the ‘ shrouds ’ of patriarchy to reveal the authentic female Spirit-Self underneath .
30 Patricia Morgan plumps for this timescale in her critique of the ‘ New Establishment ’ of social workers , psychologists , teachers and other exponents of what she calls the ‘ New Socio-Psychological Expertise ’ of child care and education .
  Next page