Example sentences of "she [vb -s] [adv] the " in BNC.

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1 She goes up the fire escape and looks into the upstairs rooms .
2 She goes down the Railway
3 She understands fully the permanence of the bonds which link men and women to the stars , to Venus , to Jupiter , the Black Moon , the Dragon , her understanding is her passion etc , etc . ’
4 It is very easy for a Secretary to fail to capture the feeling of a meeting when he or she writes up the minutes .
5 She wants just the plain white one ?
6 She holds up the American education system as an answer to the supposed link between language and class mobility .
7 She holds out the tray .
8 I think she thought Emily would be able to earn her living as a governess or lady 's companion , in the end , but she 's too idle and she has n't the wit .
9 She has n't the slightest interest in Monpazier .
10 She scoops up the rest of the cakes , shoves them into some recess within her tatters , rushes out of the cubicle and disappears into the crowd .
11 She describes well the privileges attendant on maleness , as well as the hazards and horrors awaiting certain groups of men — notably poor , black men on welfare in the US since Reagan , and gay men in the era of AIDS .
12 She uses only the pinhole camera or , as it was known in pre-photographic times , the camera obscura .
13 She says here the Rhineland . ’
14 thought like she says so I just , you know , ignored her and she says then the next day she was out doing her windows and she shouted over to Dawn ah hello Dawn and Da Dawn just says hiya .
15 She says hopefully the hunger strike will achieve something .
16 Gilligan repeats this problem when she parcels up the unconscious and sexuality in a bundle with carer-infant relations , and deals with it by labelling it ‘ Chodorow ’ .
17 She reckons up the change over an' over like she do n't trust me , ’ I admitted reluctantly .
18 Look where you are , and then , ’ she reaches out the undamaged arm to drape it cosily over Rainbow 's hunched-up shoulders , ‘ look where I am .
19 When the mouthbrooder picks up her eggs she gathers up the Synodontis eggs with them which she incubates inside her mouth along with her own fry until they are released as tiny replicas of their natural parents — possibly after preying on the cichlid fry while they are inside her mouth .
20 She spits out the word like she splutters the word ‘ Jew ’ .
21 The Second Fairy brings Grace and dances slightly faster in such a way that she shows off the lines of her body as it faces forwards and then backwards ( the traditional gesture ) .
22 She shows how the individual ( artist ) can oppose corporate image-making by using what lies around at home , plus the traditional methods of parody , satire and humour : of taking an image " too far " or nowhere near far enough .
23 And where she blows up the lorry .
24 In so doing , she reveals how the literary ‘ habit of ignoring race ’ came to be understood ‘ as a graceful , even generous , liberal gesture ’ .
25 Having been left by her husband in his urge for voyages abroad , Erendis retreats to the centre of Númenor , away from the sea , where she hears only the bleating of sheep .
26 In some cultures the mother proceeds to the status of a matriarch , when she takes on the authority of mother to the whole extended family or tribe .
27 Feeny laughs , whispers , ‘ Cocorico ’ ; they whisper back and she takes up the thread where she left off back in the bathroom :
28 It is a central theme throughout the book , and she criticises frequently the Catholic beliefs and customs .
29 In analysing the ways in which informal care in the context of an existing familial relationship is both more than and less than personal assistance , she opens up the rather sterile debate about ‘ burden ’ , ‘ dependency ’ and residential care .
30 She cleans up the Black Prince and puts him back on his table .
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