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

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1 And she goes up to the two blokes and she grabs them by the balls and goes mm not bad , nice butt , you know ?
2 So she goes up to the first man and she goes , hi , handsome , and he goes , hello , hello and he 's erected , right .
3 she said , so she goes up on the step now , goes to this
4 When it comes to her imagined transcriptions of Jip 's diary , she goes on in the same descriptive vein for a paragraph , then stops herself with an abrupt exclamation of ‘ No , he would n't say all that ’ ( 54 ) , whereupon she starts again in more concise fashion .
5 She looks at me for a bit , then she goes over to the drawer and takes out another envelope .
6 Because she , she goes in off the deep end and you
7 Mum , I do n't want that one then she goes back on the three , goes , yeah ?
8 and she , he , she goes down to the abortion centre right after and he dies !
9 She goes off to the city for a few days , but then she is back .
10 She 's back in the canteen from 9 a.m. until 3 p.m. , when she goes home to the children and her working day starts its next shift .
11 One evening soon after , she goes out to the pig yard and hurls defiance against the Almighty : ‘ Go on , call me a hog !
12 And she goes out into the street and she pulls her skirt up .
13 Sh and she really , and she makes me laugh when she said , talking to someone and when they start working again she turns round to the next person at the other side of her !
14 Although she turns up for the interview her customary peaked-capped urchin self , she is worried that her feminist interpreters will consider her video a sell-out .
15 2 She turns quickly on the balls of her feet to meet the advance .
16 Tilda appeared with a ball of oozing clay in her arms which she flung down on the table .
17 Viola was beaming benevolently as she read on into the last column .
18 She read on to the story of holidays at Blackpool and Filey , a trip to London , and the gradually expanding horizons which writing brought to Walter .
19 ‘ 'The social principles of Christianity preach cowardice , self-contempt , abasement , submissiveness , meekness — ’ she read aloud from the early works of Marx , which she had never returned to the library , property being theft , and knowledge free for everyone .
20 As fast as her rheumatic legs would carry her , she toddled round to the Rope Walk , to the house where Eb and Josh and Ruth had been born and brought up .
21 Maybe she slows down in the cold .
22 As she taxied in to the small civilian terminal , Adam watched the three fighter planes ease their pointed noses skyward and climb at over thirty thousand feet a minute .
23 She slouched back to the living room .
24 She plunged happily into the familiar noise and chaos of a house with three boys and unpacked the four plastic shopping bags that contained the gifts she had brought .
25 The ones which could not be changed , or were too important to be missed , she shared out with the others and put a schedule on their desks .
26 At the end of the ceremony she tottered off to the bus , looking as if she had every intention of popping in to the local when she got home and livening everyone up with a steady dropping of ‘ To think our ‘ Ilda should go before me ’ remarks .
27 She squelched along in the muddy ruts left by the cattle , avoiding other more unpleasant tokens of their passage .
28 Aunt Elena is a concert pianist , and she plays all over the country and in Europe , too .
29 And now she is married to Brian Bowen , towards whom she drives home through the January night .
30 Mrs Chalk was nowhere to be found , so she made straight for the medicine cupboard in the spacious Georgian-style kitchen with its enormous , old-fashioned white-painted cupboards and scrubbed-elm table , and located the painkillers , swallowing the dosage with water before setting about making the tea .
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