Example sentences of "[coord] [conj] she [adv] [verb] " in BNC.

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1 Either because she was at the bottom end of the family , or because she always had a book to study .
2 I do not know whether poor , dreamy Grandma knew what it was all about , or whether she just gathered , in a vague way , the drift of things .
3 And also , the use of the yellow background , I do n't know , erm whether it was deliberately chosen or whether she just happened to be standing there , but the yellow background makes it stand out .
4 For a period in the 1950s she flirted with Roman Catholicism , and whether her Catholic point of view made her see moral issues exclusively within a religious framework , or whether she simply did not share the same experience as English-born-and-raised writers who faced the dissolution of their class system is difficult to judge .
5 It is clear Marje never knew how her ‘ faithful ’ lover felt about Meli , or whether she even knew this rival existed .
6 First , she contended that her husband put her under undue pressure to sign and that she finally succumbed to the pressure .
7 Some sources claim the fifth month , May , was named for her , and that she latterly came to oversee the transit of the newly dead to the Afterlife .
8 Mrs Taylor said Sunday was an important day for her and her family and that she also wanted to go to church .
9 What the evidence does show is that he was genuinely fond of his new wife and that she probably died of a heart attack .
10 These include allegations that she was unfit through drink while acting as duty officer in charge of the force on July 24 , 1990 ; that she swam in a pool with a male officer while dressed only in her underwear ; and that she later shared a jacuzzi with the same officer .
11 ‘ Antonia told me she had been watching Mellor on TV in the run up to the General Election and said she had suddenly been taken over by this incredible desire for him and that she badly wanted to meet him .
12 She apparently told her , contrary to the impression given in the former interview covered by Document B , that she never condoned her daughter 's going away — which she referred to rather dramatically as a ‘ kidnap ’ — that she did everything she could to bring the matter to the authorities at the time , but ‘ was prevented ’ , that she had certainly never agreed to her daughter living with her brother , that her daughter 's health had suffered alarmingly , and that she never told any social worker that she had agreed .
13 At 5 p.m. a staff nurse joined Miss T. and her mother and Miss T. told the staff nurse that she did not want a blood transfusion , that she used to be a Jehovah 's Witness and that she still maintained some beliefs .
14 She prayed that the landlord of the Swan was right and that she only had a mile or two to cover .
15 Pricewell 's gave Anna that inch or two of dignity she had felt so sorely in need of and that she now felt she could never again surrender .
16 She took up the piano and , according to her headmistress Ruth Rudge , ‘ made phenomenal progress for someone who started late ’ ; and although she never made it into any of the school teams , she loved tennis .
17 The lines of experience were marked on her face and although she still had all the exuberant charm which had drawn him to her in the first place , he thought she looked older than he knew her to be .
18 Dead Lucky was struggling to stay in touch , but he was still there nonetheless , and if she just pushed her way out , Damien could easily make a show of snatching up .
19 ‘ Over now , ’ Dot repeated , but she was n't sure what it meant and if she even wanted it over .
20 They thought she might be having a baby , and if she really wanted to hurt them she could tell them she might be .
21 And if she still wants to go with you after three months , you have my blessing . ’
22 But she ca n't call herself one and if she ever took a Communion service , she 'd be breaking the law .
23 And if she ever used it where it was overheard , the eavesdropper would consider the activity admirable ; for George Hudson was still the Railway King .
24 Old Miss Mahoney had a little house in Tanner Road , but she had to go into hospital last week , and if she ever comes out , she 'll have to go into a home for old people .
25 She certainly needed a break from Glyn , and if she never saw Mr Edmund Clarke again it would be too soon .
26 The Princess of Wales survives attacks because she is glamorous , lovable , a devoted mother of her two boys , because children adore her and she has a natural affinity with them , and because she bravely enters fields which command respect ( shaking hands with AIDS victims for example ) .
27 And while she always spent a great deal of time and money on their Christmas presents , they only ever sent her a packet of scented drawer liners or a box of soap .
28 Suddenly she was aware that he had moved in closely behind her and before she even had time to think his arms went round her .
29 ‘ Well , listen to that , and after she near 'ad me cryin' me eyes out for 'er .
30 As soon as she closed her eyes a dark , austerely handsome face filled her mind , crowding out the last of her lingering fright , and when she eventually managed to get back to sleep it was to dream of Michele Lorenzo once more .
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