Example sentences of "[conj] she [adv] " in BNC.

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1 Liz has been appointed customer services manager with Skipton Building Society , where she previously held a management post in the commercial lending department .
2 His hair was thick and warm , and her fingers revelled in the feel of it , creeping around the back of his skull where she half-heartedly tugged to bring his head back so that she no longer ached for his kisses to continue .
3 In 1917–18 she served on the committee on post-war reconstruction , where she frequently clashed with Beatrice Webb .
4 For an illustration see ex.5e from Zerlina 's Act 2 aria , where she caressingly comforts the battered Masetto .
5 The room was not where she had lived but where she no longer lived .
6 She had been in the winning Nations Cup team in Drammen , Norway , where she also scored her first grand prix success , and , as a result of her achievements , was chosen to go with the British squad on the autumn circuit of North American shows , in Washington , New York and Toronto .
7 Her one fixation was fitness and she kept herself in peak physical condition by attending aerobic classes three times a week at the Rivereast Health Club on Second Avenue , where she also helped put housewives through their paces in the basic skills of karate .
8 Ms Robinson , of Harmire Road , Barnard Castle , took over the campaign reins more than three years ago and regards her appointment as something of a coup for the north where she also hopes one day to stage a regional conference .
9 Mia was driven to the Drumcondra clinic , where she instantly fell in love with rough , red-haired little Tip .
10 Gino 's chipper in Duke Street , near where she normally boarded her tram after work , charged one penny for a bag of crispy batter , and if you were lucky , there might be a nice piece of fish , or a stray lump of white pudding hiding among the golden , greasy flakes .
11 When you listen to one of the rather better Kylie records , they have taken a girl who does n't really have a great voice , who is an actress , and slowly they have developed a career where she actually now has a sound which is similar to some of the girly groups in the 60 ’ s , in a totally different way .
12 Where she always lived ; she never married . ’
13 Where she too might marry someone like Dad , and then have four little daughters , and perhaps five years later , at last , a son .
14 Early in 1983 the new Bomber Command Hall extension had been completed and Sugar was moved the few yards to take pride of place at the entrance to the exhibition , where she still is today .
15 However , she went into labour eleven weeks early , and her baby daughter went into intensive care , where she still was when she talked to me .
16 Dr. Ilona Roth ( married to David Lehmann ) became a lecturer in the Open University , where she still is .
17 Paula spent most of her free time alone , window shopping , visiting News Theatres , where she sometimes watched the programme of cartoons twice round , and drinking endless cups of Espresso coffee in cafés and coffee houses .
18 To the left , opposite the reception desk , in the parlour with the rubber plant and the lace half-curtains , where she sometimes had her breakfast ( if she was up before ten when Madame stopped serving it ) , she saw her grandfather , Sir Anthony Everard , erect against the window , with her young aunt his daughter beside him , Xanthe Everard , Miranda 's nursery playmate .
19 Today she had brought sandwiches , as she wanted to spend her lunch hour writing personal letters , but she felt reluctant to reveal to this young man the name of the little restaurant near Westminster Abbey , run by gentlewomen , where she often lunched .
20 A public-school education led to a secretarial college where she suddenly rebelled , sought work as an artist 's model , entered Soho , quickly becoming an habituée and one of the stars in Muriel Belcher 's galère .
21 Although she came from a financially privileged background , her education was superficial , governesses being followed by day-schools , a brief interlude at King 's College , London , where she possibly read Latin , continental history , mathematics , and elementary science for two terms , and a year in Dresden .
22 Said waitress promptly decamps to the vacant love nest where she swiftly sets up home , insisting to the locals that she is Newton 's new spouse .
23 Then there was a third offer , where she now lives .
24 All accomplished — does it not seem plain ? — to bring her finally where she now rests .
25 The fact that it managed to do so stands out with a clarity so insistent that each individual ruler — including Mary Queen of Scots — must be assessed by the extent to which he or she successfully fostered the self-perception that the Scots were a people who mattered .
26 Within two years , one of them dies , leaving the other one alone and friendless without support in a community he or she barely knows .
27 ‘ All we do know , ’ he concluded , ‘ is that the assassin must have been a member of the community at the Tower who knew Sir Ralph had changed his bed chamber , and he or she either committed the murder or hired a professional assassin to do it for them . ’
28 And that is — perhaps when receiving the undergraduate degree — that the student has reached the point when he or she intellectually can take off on his or her own , if so desired .
29 If a manager is in the A&R office at CBS , he or she rarely has access to anybody else in the company .
30 Each panel member should ensure that he or she thoroughly tests the case presented for project approval .
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