Example sentences of "she [was/were] [prep] [art] [noun] " in BNC.
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1 | Mainly there was silence , in still greenish light , as if she were at the bottom of a pool . |
2 | Under his dark , quizzical gaze she felt as if she were under a microscope as she forced her legs to move , glued a polite smile on her lips . |
3 | ‘ She were with a man , zur . ’ |
4 | Her voice had a lilt to it as if she were on the verge of laughter . |
5 | And feeling rather as if she were in a dream , she found herself sitting on a sofa in a quaint old-fashioned parlour , with Roger Kenyon , housebreaker , beside her . |
6 | She moved as if she were in a dream , wading through viscous liquid . |
7 | A short time later , while riding beside Silas , Lucy felt as if she were in a dream . |
8 | The nurse and the doctor left the room together for a moment and she grabbed him by the shoulders and shook him desperately , with an air-lock in her throat as though she were in a temper . |
9 | Suppose , suppose , she were in a state of mortal sin ? |
10 | As she were in a hurry an' it were ready I said you 'd send on t' bill . ’ |
11 | If Bernard was busy with flying lessons then she could be left in peace to get on with her work ; once he was back , if he wanted her to go somewhere with him , he would just say ‘ Come on Laura , we 're going , ’ and even if she were in the middle of a meeting , she would put away what she was doing and go . |
12 | She felt as if she were in the middle of a minefield . |
13 | and explain the situation and the court said oh well we 'll take it to the magistrate 's then , then he had a letter two weeks later saying that it 's been thrown out again , they have n't got a case cos she were in the wrong , she 's never , ever have gone |
14 | She herself felt curiously unreal , as though she were in the midst of a dream . |
15 | She could n't bear this any longer , this toing and froing of his emotions , tossing her around as if she were in the eye of a tornado . |
16 | At first , she was my running idol and then , when I got to know her , I realised how nice she was as a person as well . |
17 | The cancer had spread from the breast to various other areas including the bones and she was as a result suffering considerable pain which was not controlled by pain-killers . |
18 | She was into the pyjamas . |
19 | Gazing down , Luke thought how beautiful she was despite the tear-stains and the swollen eyelids . |
20 | Stephanie did not like cut glass : she was of the generation that discovered the plain , the functional , the Finnish , Dartington . |
21 | She gave me the names of all her friends and said how proud she was of the life her father had given her . |
22 | She was of the opinion there was more to the girl than might reasonably be expected . |
23 | Far from being tempted to explain anything then , she was of the view that she 'd see him in hell first . |
24 | Fergus had divined how afraid she was of the doll-mask and had dealt with it in his own way , daring her to let it all hang out , quoting Yeats at her in his Irish voice . |
25 | ‘ … poor , almost illiterate … her pride was that she was of the Clanranald . |
26 | Remorse and pain clutched at her , almost taking her breath away , and Jenna spun round and took to her heels , taking Alain by surprise so that she was through the door and down the stairs before he caught her . |
27 | She was through the door and out into the courtyard within seconds but Ana had already gone and all Maggie could do was follow . |
28 | He plunged back into his work , forgetting about her before she was through the door . |
29 | 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 . |
30 | The catamaran shook its bows against the swell , then she was through the wind and on to the other tack with the sails drawing sweetly . |