Example sentences of "[adj] [conj] a [noun sg] [prep] her " in BNC.

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1 She is as careful as a chemist with her reproaches .
2 As she watched him leave , without so much as a glance in her direction , such a feeling of desolation had swept over Isabel that she had almost cried out .
3 And later , falling finally into sleep with her heart as cold as a snowball in her chest , she thought : at least there is Wednesday .
4 The human mother who gave birth to a deformed , bestial hybrid would dote on it blindly , as protective as a tiger of her cub , and as cunning .
5 Although her satire on wedlock was not published for more than a century after her death , its composition elicited an immediate rebuke from her brother Samuel , who admonished her thus : Repent , renounce all wicked wit : …
6 And then , with his face no more than a foot from her own , she saw what was wedged in his mouth .
7 But Maud died childless little more than a year after her father , and thus the inheritance was unexpectedly reunited in Gaunt 's hands .
8 Little more than a year after her marriage , Ermentrude had given birth to her first child , Judith .
9 At the beginning of the war Russia had felt able to commit no more than a quarter of her field army to the southern part of the empire , as she needed the other three-quarters on her western frontier to defuse possible threats from Austria , Prussia and Sweden .
10 Valerie Moore is unable to understand how her eight-year-old son Lee strayed more than a mile from her home in Princes Road , Ellesmere Port , where he met his death on his brother 's bike .
11 The play is nothing more than a succession of her venomous attacks on the sons ’ girls and the sons ' unbelievably feeble attempts to fight back .
12 Wisely , perhaps , she avoids any more than a hint of her own view of female membership of MCC .
13 For so long she 'd held the secrets of her past under lock and key , barely allowing even Kelly much more than a glimpse into her background .
14 Her decision to reject an offer of a senior ministerial post in the Home Office will confirm the prejudices of those who regard her unpredictability and wilfulness as more than a match for her flair for promoting ideas .
15 Even that proved not enough to save her ; less than a year after her father 's passing , she finally succumbed to the illness which had beset her for so long , and was laid to rest at St John 's .
16 Less than a year after her arrival in Cotherstone , a crisis occurred .
17 She had worked hard to achieve qualification in the contracts and purchasing side of engineering , but , in her present job , she was using less than a quarter of her skills .
18 She lay down again and resolutely set her mind on sleep , with such good effect that she knew no more until a hand on her shoulder woke her .
19 Anyway , she looked as beautiful as a rose in her tube dress , arching her neck , turning her flowerlike head , pouting professionally , smiling .
20 Whatever her reasoning , I was greatly shocked that a woman of her achievements and reputation should stoop to such shabby fibbing .
21 She was perfectly calm , perfectly quiet , and had nothing to say , other than a reiteration of her previous statement , to wit , ‘ he could never resist a cherry ’ .
22 The compulsion to get away , and not look back , was as strong as a hand on her shoulder urging her forward .
23 In her mind , she saw her mother , not dead but full of life with her eyes bright and a smile on her lips .
24 Historians are certain to acknowledge that she dominated the political landscape of the 1980s and a number of her policies will leave a mark in post-Thatcher Britain .
25 What was it like , life in the 1980s for a woman on her own ?
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