Example sentences of "she [verb] [art] [noun sg] " in BNC.
Next pageNo | Sentence |
---|---|
1 | ‘ Oh , let 'er have the rope , Dick . |
2 | ‘ Bessie was 'avin' ter do the servin' an' yer know I do n't like 'er be'ind the counter more than need be . |
3 | She alerts the reader in her introduction to what she finds offensive in these genteel concoctions of tea and adultery : … if a comic charlady obtrudes upon the action of a real novel , I will fling the novel against the wall amidst a flood of obscenities because the presence of such a character as a comic charlady tells me more than I wish to know about the way her creator sees the world . |
4 | Maria 's heart clenched as she slanted a look at his grim countenance . |
5 | ‘ Perhaps I can stay here , ’ she whispered an entreaty . |
6 | She goes every evening to the post , ’ and they began to laugh again at what they saw as a mocking mirror of their own flowering . |
7 | and er , like she said are n't you Vicky and she goes no miss , mm , you ca n't be a nurse till your eighteen |
8 | And she goes no Miss . |
9 | goes out in Kings Cross and sh , men walk , a man walks past she goes the man goes Aargh aargh ! |
10 | Her eyes rounded and she hugged every scrap of blanket she could around her body , making a barrier to his hot eyes . |
11 | With clenched teeth , keeping her head low and her eyes half-closed , she hugged the cliff-face and inched her way along . |
12 | She hugged the child to her . |
13 | Fielding it with one hand , she sobered , and , putting her glass down on the fender , she hugged the cushion on her knees . |
14 | She hugged the girder . |
15 | She threads the Monster back into the high chair where it stiffens , collapses forward , stiffens again , slides down to the crutch-stop and lies there half under the tray , flailing its arms and legs like a crab on its back … and howling — howling like the hell-sent creature it is . |
16 | Quickly she stowed the silver away , put up the lampshade and left the others on the table . |
17 | It was a measure of Cecilia 's character that , unlike most people , she experienced no schadenfreude about this , felt no secret pleasure in the superiority of her circumstances over her friend 's , but sincerely regretted Daphne 's inferior home and reduced income . |
18 | Britain therefore experienced a credit squeeze in the early 1990s during a period of recession in much the same way — and for much the same reasons — that she experienced a credit boom during the period of growth and ‘ overheating ’ in the mid-1980s . |
19 | Carol , aged 29 and a first-time mother , was induced just four days before her baby 's due date because she experienced a rise in her blood pressure . |
20 | She experienced a sense of detachment before cutting herself , and the act seemed to relieve feelings of anxiety and tension which usually arose from problems in her relationship with her boyfriend . |
21 | As she sat there , she experienced a sense of what seemed to be preternatural power . |
22 | With a good heavy hot iron , it would stop belling out here and there , she thought , and she experienced a flash of pleasure at the quickness and deftness of her work . |
23 | Now , standing beside Fernand in the mouth of a gash in the cliff , with the river raging beneath their feet and an ink-dark cavern ahead , she experienced a tingle of awe and anticipation that swept away the fear and the vertigo . |
24 | She experienced a lot of pain and perhaps always would ; her privations may have damaged her health permanently . |
25 | And to be his was what she wanted — which made it such a nonsense that when , as he caressed his hands over her naked behind and then pulled her to him , that as her body came into contact with the pure maleness of him , she experienced a moment of totally unexpected panic . |
26 | She experienced the pull of her blood into his mouth like threads of silk drawn up from her vein . |
27 | But soon she experienced the misery of the lonely wife , staying at a Bel Air mansion , coping with two babies and playing tennis when she could to fill the void . |
28 | She turns the Government 's self-help approach around by arguing that urban recovery will only be achieved by empowering the people who live in cities . |
29 | She turns the water to steam and frees the light inside her , twisting and turning in a sparkling , spinning column . |
30 | Then Susan comes in , and when she has put down the tray she is carrying , she turns the light on beside his chair and draws the curtains so that the room becomes a series of pools of light , isolating each of us . |