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

  Next page
No Sentence
1 Her own health by that time was not of the best and she latterly resided in Dalnair House , Croftamie , where she was well cared for .
2 I mean Julie works out there and she rarely goes in there .
3 Evelyn smiled , something she rarely did in Newman 's experience of her , brief though it might be .
4 Until the death of her sister , the Duchess of Alba , in 1860 , Eugénie would herself occasionally waltz with her husband at these ‘ Mondays ’ , but from 1860 onwards she rarely danced in public except as a duty .
5 It is a trait she rarely sees in the very young .
6 Indeed , Leonard can only recall a volume of the Russian writer Gogol on her shelf , by which she presumably kept in touch with her own more distant — if painful — affiliations , though influencing Leonard , perhaps , unconsciously , with Gogol 's sense of fantasy and comic genius — as well as his need to travel . )
7 There were even rumours that her condition would force her withdrawal , but such scares proved unfounded and she duly arrived in the paddock .
8 In more or less timeless modern dress , the duel between the Christian knight Tancred and his former Saracen girlfriend Clorinda , she metaphorically encased in cap-a-pie armour is described by the narrator but enacted unseen behind a sofa .
9 Twice a week she vengefully looks in here to dust the place , and dirty all the dishes , and worry the bed .
10 She mostly lived in the country and she was rich .
11 She eventually fell in love with a lawyer , but her father objected to this match .
12 she eventually succeeds in escaping the family but is distressed to the point of tears because she has been forced to disobey her father .
13 After her separation from Bonnie Prince Charlie in 1784 , she eventually settled in Florence with her tame poet , Alfieri , who possibly became her second husband .
14 Finding that Mary Read was totally in control of all work out there , she swiftly gave in her notice .
15 Forever on the move , meeting new faces , constantly in demand socially whenever she was off duty , Liza Tremayne found that there were longer and longer periods between the days when she still suffered black despair over the thought that she would never again see the man she so resembled in character and who had given her , had she known it , more love than he had ever bestowed upon any other woman .
16 She suddenly felt in a great hurry to escape , instinctively disliking this pretty , richly-dressed young American .
17 A minute or so earlier she might have burst out laughing again at what she considered was an ‘ over the top ’ compliment but — and she owned that seeing Ven Gajdusek was to blame — she suddenly felt in a laughing mood no longer .
18 ‘ I 've sometimes thought she was perhaps my mother , ’ she suddenly said in a rush and then paused , turning the statement into a question .
19 ‘ They have a leprechaun hunt ! ’ she suddenly exclaimed in delight .
20 Katherine Colgrave 's lawyers claim she only discovered in 1984 that she may have escaped disability if she 'd been correctly diagnosed and treated soon after birth .
21 She suddenly recollected that she was now the wife of the director of a large company , and drew herself up with what she hoped was some dignity ; but she only succeeded in looking more than ever like a pouter pigeon .
22 Every time she vowed to get closer to Matthew , she only succeeded in driving him further away .
23 Erm , the the other things is a little while ago she was erm , er , er you know , giving me bills like for about five or six pounds once for cleaning materials , and I queried this , because it 's quite a lot of money and erm , so she tells me that she buys expensive erm bleach and she uses a bottle of that a week , well she only comes in three times , and I said well , that 's very extravagant I said and told her what , but since I told her that .
24 e She only fishes in fresh water .
25 She only lives in Hatfield .
26 At six o'clock the next morning she finally fell in front of the door of the workhouse , and the people there took her in .
27 At midnight , twenty-four hours after leaving Calais , she finally arrived in Milan where she had to change trains .
28 She soon fell in love with someone else , also about nine years older than herself , who seemed very keen and wanted to marry her .
29 He heard the Direktor calling them back to work again , and he crossed to Ingrid who was nervously studying her score , her lips moving as yet again she went over the part she already knew in minute detail .
30 She would not ask for any further exchange of nuclear information , but she must be released from her obligation not to use the knowledge she already possessed in seeking collaboration with other partners .
  Next page