Example sentences of "she [verb] him [art] " in BNC.
Next pageNo | Sentence |
---|---|
1 | She slanted him a scornful glance . |
2 | She flung him a savage little smile . |
3 | He advanced towards her and she flung him a look full of wrath , annoyingly conscious of his height and the wide breadth of his shoulders . |
4 | She met him a few days after she started the job . |
5 | He 'd allowed her closer than anyone else , and when his clothes were off and he was tired she read him the way she read the weather or the mountains or the dust , she ran her fingers over his pale , scarred body and she guessed close to the truth . |
6 | and knit a jumper for Michael an'all , when Michael 's in she knits him a jumper , the jumper |
7 | And had she given him a chance to explain ? |
8 | She made him a sandwich and brought it to the table . |
9 | He begged her not to miss the party they were invited to on his account , so she made him a hot drink , turned on the TV and , making no bones about it , said she would be back in the morning . |
10 | When the man who waited with her crept to her shoulder and whispered in her ear , as he did several times between his nervous pacings about the room , she made him no answer , and never seemed even to be aware of him , though her braced tension made it plain that nothing that passed in this apartment escaped her instant notice . |
11 | He was going out with a silly cow of an art student and she lent him the book . |
12 | Then she asked him a question in Yorkshire dialect , because that was his language . |
13 | ‘ Is this a regular haunt of yours ? ’ she asked him a little waspishly . |
14 | Perhaps if she asked him a simple , straightforward question she would receive a simple , straightforward answer in return . |
15 | ‘ There , Mr Cottle , ’ Mary Ann was saying to the traveller in jelly , as she passed him the bread and butter , ‘ this 'll put roses in your cheeks . ’ |
16 | When she passed him the number of her room ( thinking no one else knew she had ) and left to await him , he remained in the ballroom drinking , and when I left at midnight he was still there looking bored and lonely , missing his live-in girlfriend Marie Lisa Volpelierre ( who not long after died so tragically in a riding accident ) . |
17 | Their hands touched as she passed him the bottle . |
18 | She passed him the tin and the spoon , and lay on the floor looking at the gas fire , and then she went to sleep . |
19 | She tried not to imagine his sympathetic brown eyes looking into hers , and his disarming smile when she spoke to him , perhaps their hands touching as she passed him the local anaesthetic — This is no use ! she admonished herself , rubbing energetically at a stainless steel trolley . |
20 | She was screwing up the courage to suggest she cook him a meal over the weekend when he glanced at his watch . |
21 | I would suggest she baths him every four weeks in Vitacoat Gold Seal and uses Velvet coat spray on his feathers and skirt every day . |
22 | She bore him a third son , but a difficult carriage and birth presaged troubles which eventually cost her her life in her forties . |
23 | In Paris , in March 1881 , she bore him a daughter , who was christened Jeanne-Marie , with the surname of Langtry . |
24 | Her hand came up and she caught him a stinging blow across the cheek , watching without a flicker as the mark turned first white , then red . |
25 | Det Sgt Stimpson said : ‘ She searches him every time he comes home or goes out , and she keeps his bedroom bare of the usual toys and clutter so that she can see at a glance whether he has hidden any stolen property . ’ |
26 | Similarly in He loves her ; She loves him the form he is replaced by him after loves , while her becomes she after loves . |
27 | She found him a new toothbrush in its unbroken wrap , and said , ‘ It 's a pity about Sir George . |
28 | She found him a ‘ rather stern-featured man ’ , with a strong Northumbrian accent and seems to have preferred the ‘ Rocket ’ which she described as ‘ This snorting little animal , which I felt inclined to pat … ’ and so ranks among the first to fall under the spell of the steam locomotive . |
29 | They talked over a meal that was prepared especially for her , and she found him a charming and entertaining companion . |
30 | They met ; he found her company agreeable , she found him a new slogan . |