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

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1 He had this way of drawing her to him and she always seemed to go .
2 Her eyes flickered towards him and she playfully stuck out her tongue .
3 The truth was , of course , that hard-nosed journalist though she was , Margie was as attracted to Hugo as was almost every other woman who met him and she actually wanted him to like her .
4 So she came back to London and married the man I called my father , but she never really cared for him and she still saw this other man sometimes when he came to London on business .
5 His mother used to visit his older brother Simon and make a bit of a fuss of him but she totally blanked Nick and he was hurt .
6 The interviewer is likely to start with some ideas to stimulate the informant to talk but beyond this he or she simply listens .
7 If a user wants to read all the news stories on say , Lloyd 's insurance , he or she simply types in the name on a computer keyboard and a complete list of stories appears on the screen in seconds .
8 I argued a moment ago that if the student is to enter into his or her own work , and is to be committed to it , he or she simply has to be given the intellectual space — to a degree — to follow his or her own inclinations .
9 This analysis raises the same question addressed in the previous section : if the speaker wanted the hearer to recover these effects , why did n't he or she simply say that they sprinted up the hill ?
10 So , for example , it may be that a keen walker would have a special interest in a stretch of country where he or she frequently walked which would entitle him or her to challenge a decision to grant planning permission to develop it , whereas an ordinary member of the public or even of some environmental group in a different area might not have .
11 The fact that it managed to do so stands out with a clarity so insistent that each individual ruler — including Mary Queen of Scots — must be assessed by the extent to which he or she successfully fostered the self-perception that the Scots were a people who mattered .
12 The stock editor generally concentrated on stock revision and supervision of withdrawals , but in some authorities he or she also played a large part in the selection of new books .
13 Although it is not in itself part of the system which generates intensional structures , and we shall not make the term part of our fundamental descriptive apparatus , we may say that the property of an adjective applies to an entity when the language user takes the property which it designates to be valid ( in positive statements ) for some entity which he or she also recognizes ( even if the entity itself may be acknowledged as an imaginary one ) .
14 He or she also settled expenses incurred since the deceased 's death , such as the cost of the funeral .
15 He or she also has to learn which strategies are acceptable in which classroom , since teachers ' demands will vary .
16 He or she also has power to refuse for good cause to accept an application or to decline to give advice .
17 Now then , he argues that since in the state of nature erm the individual has the right to life , liberty and property , he or she also has a right to take such steps are necessary for the protection o o of these rights .
18 He or she also needs to demonstrate commitment to curriculum and pastoral development .
19 Given that the theist believes that defining God involves thinking beyond the limits of thought , can he or she also fulfil the demand that a clear explanation be given of what is meant by the word ‘ God ’ ?
20 He or she has to believe it , and to be able to back it up with reasons which he or she also believes .
21 If you have an entertainer , this is not likely to happen , unless you explain that you do not mind if he or she just lets the party run on its own for a while .
22 He or she just makes the evaluations and makes the decisions and that 's that .
23 Within two years , one of them dies , leaving the other one alone and friendless without support in a community he or she barely knows .
24 The addition of colour , and specifically the facility to produce separations , is of substantial benefit to the professional graphic artist but , unless he or she already possesses a colour Macintosh II , is likely to be of little real benefit to the average user other than as a ‘ feature ’ to show off .
25 ( The only failures at innovation that I saw in high-tech firms occurred when the manager thought he or she already had so much power that coalition building was unnecessary . )
26 Whereas the adult is influenced by what he or she already knows or by what other people have been saying .
27 ‘ A person who has symptoms of cardiovascular disease has much more to gain from reducing lipid levels [ because he or she already has a higher risk of dying from the disease ] than does someone with desirable lipid levels , ’ he says .
28 Indeed , talk to any manager and he or she already has common-sense theories of motivation , often built up over long periods of observing people at work .
29 It will all depend on the choice to be made by the national legislatures , and in the case of countries which make the third choice the employee 's option not to transfer may give the worker no more than he or she already has under the Mikkelsen doctrine i.e. the option of going over or resigning from employment with the transferor .
30 Finally , evidence is accumulating that a person 's emotional environment influences his or her likelihood of suffering an acute psychotic episode if he or she already has a history of schizophrenic disorder .
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