Example sentences of "and [conj] she [verb] [art] " in BNC.

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1 Now Mrs Duffy is hoping to have the murder case involving her son moved to another area where nobody has heard of the name Lee Duffy and where she believes a fairer trial would be held .
2 My view was that it was enough to clear it with the Chancellor of the Exchequer and that she had a war to fight .
3 I had the feeling on reading it that a dam had just burst , and that she had a great deal more to say .
4 At her trial , Jean Campbell pleaded not guilty by signs and gestures interpreted by Robert Kinniburgh , and went on to show that she knew the difference between right and wrong , was indignant at the imputation of having murdered her child , and that she had a notion of what marriage was by signing the ring on her finger and removing it , and going away .
5 Carolyn noticed that her thin white legs were bare , and that she had a pair of fluffy pink mules on her feet .
6 An OSF spokeswoman said Tory was preparing his own remarks and that she had no idea what he would finally say .
7 In interviews , she had claimed there were no diabetic residents at Lancaster House and that she had no access to insulin even though it was kept in an unlocked refrigerator , he said .
8 The prosecution decided that Jean Campbell knew the difference between right and wrong and the consequence of punishment for any wrongful deed , and that she had the power of communicating her thoughts , albeit by signs , and put her on trial at the next sessions , which took place on 24th September 1817 .
9 The artist … explained that the printer 's contribution in creating the official lithograph was merely mechanical , that his sole contribution was to reproduce the original as closely as possible , and that she had the absolute right of approval of all aspects of the final prints .
10 She explained that Gran had once been a famous singer and that she played the organ and was teaching Oliver to sing .
11 It may be that the spectacle of an intellectually ambitious kitchen maid unnerved her employers , and that she posed a threat to their view of a proper social order .
12 While he did not exactly oppose this suggestion , he added , somewhat enigmatically , that he believed Liza 's trouble was due to circumstances quite beyond her control and that she needed the help not so much of a specialist but a sympathetic friend personally acquainted with her predicament .
13 You can tell him you showed the girl a knife , that you got into her room and that she handed the wallet over .
14 Cecil Parkinson , regarded as a potential successor to Mr Lawson at the Exchequer , said in a BBC television interview : ‘ You heard the Prime Minister last night say very clearly and openly that she and the Chancellor are in total agreement and that she has every confidence in him .
15 Erm , I think the idea is that a woman is a man 's possession , that she should be subservient , she should do as she 's told and that she has no intelligent to think intelligence to think for herself !
16 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 .
17 There was nothing the big , anxious woman could do to investigate the matter further and although she played the beam of the torch on every inch visible to her , she could n't see whatever it was that might have made her daughter scream other than the damp and secret darkness of the place .
18 She could see that the game was drawing to a close — nearly all the pieces on the board had disappeared — and although she had no idea who was winning she thought that the gladiators needed sustenance .
19 Luke telephoned her early to tell her , tersely , what time he would fetch her that night , and although she put a frigid resentment into her voice Maria did n't demur , since it was in their public , professional capacities that the radio station 's personnel had been issued with complimentary tickets to the first Taiwanese appearance of a fairly famous American singer .
20 Their rooms adjoined , and if she had a nightmare , he was first in to comfort her and laugh the fears away .
21 But she had character , and if she had a secret , I would say she could keep it . ’
22 Cooking dinner , and if she got a what's-a-name , if they 'd got parties on , she used to stop there had to stop there till two .
23 A woman who kept a child home from school to mind the baby while she worked broke the law , and if she left the baby alone and it injured itself , she was also liable to prosecution .
24 She had given herself a fair amount of time to get to Luke 's , and if she left the motorway at the next junction and did n't hang around she 'd be only a little late at the most .
25 She went from room to room , praising the decor , and if she noticed the paintings they did n't appear to do her any obvious mischief .
26 Soft music flooded through her helmet , and if she ignored the sensation of movement , she could almost pretend she was sitting at home … almost .
27 And if she took a sudden dislike to a client , or observed one member behaving badly to another , her command , ‘ Out , cunt ! ’ , sent them packing .
28 And if she abandoned the search for him , and hurried to the Hall , back to her father , what comfort there ?
29 My missus has to buy the kids ' clothes down the jumble sale and if she wants a pair of nylons they come off the Green Shield stamps .
30 And if she wants a train set then her granny will be the first to help her set it up .
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