Example sentences of "she [verb] it [prep] [art] [adj] " in BNC.

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1 She met it with a puzzled look in her eyes .
2 She read it through the following morning and decided not to send it , but a small niggle of grievance stayed in her mind .
3 Now , while Anna slept , she read it for the tenth time .
4 Now Liz did n't win our first , second or third prize er last year , but she , she made it to the final twelve , er her , her full-length novel now , has now been accepted by Collins and that 's going to be published next February , there 's talk of a big American contract for Liz and Liz has now been floated away in to the world of big time professional writing .
5 God was clearly on her side and she made it to the living-room door without a hitch .
6 Whatever the grandeur of the situation she transcends it with a sweet serenity which mesmerizes everyone .
7 Short of battering him on the head with a blunt instrument — the thought held immense appeal , and she savoured it for a long moment , before reluctantly putting it on hold — she could n't come up with any way out of the present situation .
8 She regarded it as an unofficial library , as remote and as Municipal as the library itself And then , one Saturday morning , she went into it with Walter Ash , to look at ( not to buy ) the text of Anouilh 's Ring Round the Moon , which was being currently performed at the local rep .
9 She bore it with a little smile of amusement that began to enrage me .
10 She caught it at the public baths , ’ said his mum , with another one of her sniggers .
11 She dismissed it with a regal gesture .
12 She ranged it beside a dozen other pots and jars and bottles on her dressing-table and it looked well .
13 She handles it like a sophisticated traveller unthreatened by a new airport .
14 Why do it now , why did n't she do it in the first place .
15 She imagined it as a tiny surge welling over a dam and splashing into a parched valley .
16 Telling the story , as she imagined it of the mad wife .
17 She adjusted it at a still more ludicrous angle in the mirror .
18 So she approaches it in a better frame of mind .
19 Above all , it 's a relaxing therapy and she sees it as a major way of helping a runner ‘ warm down ’ .
20 She opened it with a trembling hand and sat staring at it for a long time .
21 Searching round for where she 'd put her champagne glass , she discovered it on a wrought-iron table behind her .
22 It decided her ; instantly she followed it to the broad Danube .
23 She heard it in the raised treble , saw it in the bright eyes .
24 She repeated it in a dull , polite way .
25 And she frightened it into the supreme effort that carried it up , soaring and stretching , reaching beyond any achievement it knew of , until , by a hairsbreadth , it gained the crest of the fallen trunk .
26 Clare levered the coins off the counter , and carried her cup out into the small enclosure , where she balanced it on an unsteady iron table , her feet cushioned by a carpet of litter .
27 Charles had given it to her for a joke , suggesting she use it as a visual aid to introduce Saussurean linguistics to first-year undergraduates , holding the tube aloft to demonstrate that what is onomatopoeia in one language community may be obscenity in another .
28 Eventually , after appealing her case for years in the UK , she took it to the European Court which agreed that there must be equal opportunities to claim social security benefits , and that discrimination on the grounds of either sex or marital status must end .
29 It was so easy to flatter her , she took it like a sixteen year old wino 's never heard it before .
30 She had known this all along , but she knew it with a different knowledge now .
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