Example sentences of "[prep] her [noun sg] at [art] [adj] " in BNC.

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1 It is precisely this sort of arrangement — ‘ rooms had been taken there because they were to start by an early train on that line in the morning ’ — that leads to a fraught dinner party for Clara Amedroz and the two rivals for her hand at the Great Northern Hotel , King 's Cross , in Anthony Trollope 's The Belton Estate ( 1865 ) .
2 We lined up on the foredeck to give the traditional three cheers for her Majesty at the appropriate moment .
3 She tried to pray for her father at the same time , but Madeleine danced across her invocation , Madeleine provocative in yellow piqué and high-heeled sandals disrupted her holy words .
4 The theme Eva took for her testimony at a united service in Brisbane the Good Friday after her conversion summed up her new found faith .
5 Lucenzo burst into laughter himself , and she wished he had n't , a sharp jolt of awareness rocketing through her body at the dazzling transformation of his face and the deep , warm sound that had travelled through her to her tingling toes .
6 Critical rejection of her poetry at an early stage denied her an audience , but also brought her freedom to write on , unfettered by that audience 's demands or limitations .
7 Helynsar ran well in the later stages of her race at the last meeting when Treat Me Good scored and she may be worth following against a moderate lot in the Moira Novices Chase .
8 Away from the defence debate Dr Mowlam also yesterday spoke of her despair at the growing homeless problem in her constituency .
9 Curbishley won the senior women 's race in an encouraging 63.7 seconds , even though she tore a ligament at the side of her knee at the halfway mark .
10 She told another foreign reporter that she had spent most of her time at the General Staff learning English .
11 The audience held its breath … and I secretly prayed that the manager would support me — unlike her counterpart at the Philharmonic Hall who earlier this year asked a young disabled woman to leave the hall because she ‘ offended ’ the visiting conductor .
12 With a hopeless shrug of resignation she hurriedly put on a slim linen dress , which she had only thrown into her case at the last minute .
13 She bit her lip , conscious of the colour racing into her face at the unexpected praise .
14 At the [ material ] time the plaintiff had come from the back door of the house and had walked diagonally across the first concrete area ; she was intending to go and have a chat with her neighbour at the next house .
15 She went about with her head at a slight angle and her eyes permanently narrowed , to avoid the smoke .
16 Jane Pargeter sniffed and prodded with her toe at an imaginary stain in the carpet .
17 So was Alice Dodds , who lived with her family at the far end of the Butts .
18 She leaned forward , her hair falling across her face , and as he lifted his head she brought her lips down on his , parting them with her tongue at the same moment as she felt his hands unzipping her jeans .
19 Red lights seemed to explode inside her head at the outrageous arrogance of his words .
20 Because she knew he would be meeting her at the road alone , she had risen very early and bathed and scented herself with special care in her suite at the Continental Palace that morning .
21 Chapman had been convicted in her absence at an earlier hearing of abandoning the rat and causing unnecessary suffering to a domestic pet between October 23 and 29 at her former home in Streatham .
22 Although ‘ Moore Intime ’ had the cooperation of the Henry Moore Foundation , she reminded everyone of her diverging views in her speech at the inaugural dinner : ‘ I can see and feel the real Henry Moore in this exhibition in a way that has never before been achieved .
23 Mrs. Rene Henry , our Chairman , will undoubtedly make reference to these affairs in her report at the Annual General Meeting to be held , by kind permission of Matron Elder , at the Nursing Home at 7.30 pm. on Monday , 26th .
24 In her time at the Royal Academy she remembered buskers in the tube , but they played rock or sometimes jazz .
25 Some find her inconsistencies maddening , failing to understand how a right-on feminist could have done such a thing as using Mandy Smith in her show at the very height of the tabloid fuss over Smith 's under-age relationship with Bill Wyman .
26 Sitting in her office at the historic Philharmonic Hall , she contemplates her newfound lease of life .
27 In the meantime his lady was exposed to public gaze seated in her chair at a great open window .
28 In her self-portrait at the national Portrait Gallery she appears ‘ characteristically in a suit ’ .
29 When she turned to question Lucenzo , her breath caught in her throat at the infinite tenderness in his eyes .
30 She gave us much happiness until her death at the great age of nineteen .
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