Example sentences of "she [verb] [pron] [adv prt] of " in BNC.
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1 | She flung herself out of the kitchen and along the passage . |
2 | She led us out of the church , round the back and through a wood . |
3 | It was n't real muslin but she made it out of this material . |
4 | There were two , but she knotted one out of the way . |
5 | Everything went wrong , but she got me out of trouble . |
6 | She got one out of the cupboard under the stairs . |
7 | Somehow she got herself out of the room , and up the stairs before anyone appeared to speak to her , tore off her clothes , and then hid the betraying underwear in a Gladstone bag which she later threw off Waterloo Bridge after she had left the embassy , pretending to go with Laura Parslow on her European tour , but actually having hired herself out to J. D. O'Connor , and gone to the East End . |
8 | It smelled all right when she got it out of the oven . |
9 | Two days before she was killed , she phoned me out of the blue . |
10 | Rudely , without waiting for him to hand it to her , she snatched it out of his hand , then anxiously turned over the scrawled papers one by one . |
11 | ‘ I 'm helping to set out the stalls for the hospital bazaar — should be back about midday , ’ she called , as she let herself out of the house . |
12 | Then she let herself out of the door and walked through the yard , muttering quietly to Ferry , so that he would know who it was . |
13 | Then she let herself out of the farmhouse , and started to walk . |
14 | Glass in hand , she bundled herself out of the room . |
15 | As it was , she rejected it out of hand . |
16 | ‘ I 'm sorry , ’ she says to me , as she bundles them out of the front door , ‘ but what can I do ? ’ |
17 | As he lunged for her she threw herself out of the way and looked desperately for a way out . |
18 | She hauled me out of the room and virtually pulled me up the stairs : I thought my shoulder would come out of its socket . |
19 | She hauled herself out of the bath , pulled on a bathrobe and wandered through into the sitting-room . |
20 | With her penetrating instinct she did not like him , and was so angry with me for , as she said , ‘ wasting myself upon such rubbish ’ , that in the end she turned me out of my room and I went to live in a tiny , freezing attic in a house in Morningside Crescent owned by a friend of hers , a white woman . |
21 | She turned her out of the house , and rightly so — contaminating innocent children . ’ |
22 | Although it might sound as though Dawn was petrified of Jasper there were a number of occasions when she scared him out of his skin . |
23 | Laura was so relieved that she could only nod silently while she followed him out of the room . |
24 | ‘ I think you 'd better rest here for a while , ’ she followed him out of the kitchen and into the sitting-room to tell him . |
25 | Without speaking , she elbowed him out of the way and continued with her baking , thumping and banging the dough into shape , all the time her tears falling silently . |
26 | She urged him out of the chair , and when he was on his feet , she began to undress him . |
27 | She prised it out of its little grave and wiped it clean . |
28 | When she pulled herself out of bed and went to the bathroom , instructing me not to look at the sketch , I got the chance to examine it . |
29 | She pulled herself out of the unsealed suit and peered through the shuttle 's windows at the featureless walls of the landing bay . |
30 | She pulled it out of the pad with shaking fingers and tore it across and across again until it was a pile of tiny white flakes all over her bed . |