Example sentences of "morning she " in BNC.

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1 It was all right for Annabel — she 's only six , and as long as she can feed sugar to the milkman 's horse every morning she 's happy .
2 Pre-Astrid , Jay had been in a dead job , art workshops with utterly disillusioned teenagers , every morning she coughed she rang in sick , malingering Mondays , rain seeped in the doors of the empty bus every morning , the bus to the High Street for the next bus , hoping to be early enough to miss the screaming leering sneering schoolgirls she had to face all day .
3 Each morning she opened all her luggage , looked at the shirts and dresses and pairs of trousers , felt a moment 's regret for a favourite red silk blouse , before choosing either the cotton shorts and the yellow tee shirt or the denim shorts and the pink top .
4 Each night she spoke to a waiter to order a meal ; each morning she asked for boiled rather than scrambled eggs for breakfast .
5 She was amazed at herself , but she had done it , and now in the early hours of the morning she did not know if , even so , she would go .
6 This was not Phoebe 's place and she knew quite simply that tomorrow morning she would go to see her own GP and organize the necessary hospital visit .
7 Usually she enjoyed the tasks of morning but this morning she was grateful above all mornings for the constancy of the small demanding chores : to shake out the fire , scatter the ashes on the grass outside , to feel the stoked fire warm the room .
8 They were also told that at 10 o'clock next morning she would be put on a plane back to India .
9 Towards morning she woke limp and exhausted , shivering with cold .
10 However , that morning she had found herself preparing the children 's sandwiches for school — as she did each day — by buttering newspaper instead of the bread .
11 By morning she had lost five pounds , there was no right pelvic pain or ovarian swelling , and she felt much better generally .
12 As a first step she must go to Paris to meet the Ministers and in the early hours of the morning she left by carriage for the Tuileries , where , on arrival , she immediately sent messages convoking a Council of Ministers .
13 This morning she gives priority to the fact that it is the first day of the winter term , and that she has a lecture to deliver and two tutorials to conduct .
14 They parted at dawn but when he approached her later the same morning she froze him with an icy gaze and said , ‘ In the circle in which I move , sleeping with a man does not constitute an introduction . ’
15 This morning she had started out late for Pack Meeting , so instead of going by the woodland path , which was a long way round , she 'd taken the direct route by road and arrived in time .
16 In the morning she took me to the station , with my luggage including the cot , put me on the train , and said ‘ Goodbye . ’
17 Next morning she went and reported him to the foreman , who sent for Jim and asked ‘ What 's this woman on about ? ’ .
18 Next morning she simply would not accept they were still trembling all over but would just nod and say , ‘ Oh yes , I can see you 're much better , luv . ’
19 Next morning she seemed so ill that Breeze telephoned Doctor Andrews .
20 That morning they parted under the trees , he never took her all the way to the gates , that would only have made things worse , that morning she looked the way she always looked , rings under her eyes and her whole body braced for the ordeal that lay ahead , how hard it was to leave her always , maybe that was why they always drew the parting out , sometimes it took minutes , just the saying goodbye , they backed away from each other , then stopped and called something out , then backed away again , they called out special words that they 'd made up , words to fill the distance between them , words for the things they could n't say , they backed away till he was under the trees or she was through the gates , whichever happened first , she looked the same way she always looked that morning , except for one thing , she had a clock tucked under her arm , the clock they 'd found together , the clock that did n't tick , the lonely clock .
21 One morning she laid the Prison Notebooks of Gramsci on his chest , not realizing that his addiction to paperbacks was n't entirely undiscriminating .
22 At ten to seven that terrible morning she had woken her elder daughter , a thirteen-year-old who , with her eleven-year-old sister , was sleeping in a caravan just outside the front door of the family home .
23 In the morning she heard people coming to church , and she wondered about Dick .
24 Ruth did not sleep much , and when Ernest came downstairs next morning she was already up and doing .
25 Had Joss Barnet not joined her this morning she might have felt quite differently about the plan .
26 This morning she had been told that she was ill-mannered ; now it seemed she was not fit to be a lady !
27 The next morning she came knocking on his door .
28 This morning she had been pale , still , but cheerful as anything .
29 One morning she said , ‘ Is n't it terrible what happened to Jimmy Dean ? ’
30 The following morning she was struck with a heavy fever and by the end of the day she was stone deaf .
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