Example sentences of "[adv] [pron] [vb past] she [prep] the " in BNC.
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1 | So I kissed her on the cheek . |
2 | So I brought her to the valley . |
3 | Perhaps you pulled her by the ankles , dragging her head beneath the water ? |
4 | So he clothed her in the Waters of Life . ’ |
5 | So he took her down the hill again . |
6 | So he threw her in the river . |
7 | Quickly he led her to the saddle , pushing her face down onto its hard smooth surface , his hands caressing her intimately all the while , keeping her mind dark , her senses inflamed . |
8 | Mutely he blessed her for the information and , after quickly slaking his appetite , he was drawn — as if he had no will of his own — to the pothouse , where he picked up Joanna , went out with her into the fields , and made love with a sweating savagery which seemed to satisfy even her and delivered him of a madness which had gathered like an abscess . |
9 | A little later he crooked her in the shelter of his arms and said , ‘ You 've no idea what it took for me to come over to see you that first time . ’ |
10 | ‘ We 're nearly there , ’ he said soothingly , and a few moments later he escorted her through the elaborate palm Court which was the entrance to the Royal Hotel . |
11 | Then at a remote place on the bank of the River Swale he first sexually assaulted her and when she fought back he battered her about the head with a rock or rocks from the bank until he thought she was dead . ’ |
12 | Well they took her at the there was a I was gon na give one . |
13 | The very day we got here he cornered her in the scullery and embraced her with tears in his eyes , saying adorada , adorada . |
14 | Then I found her outside the kitchen door , crying , she 'd lost her shoes what with one thing and another and she was too ashamed to come back into the house . |
15 | Rachaela could only take Ruth to the school in the mornings ; at least she saw her to the gates . |
16 | Then he looked her in the eye . |
17 | He come up the hospital , I was up in intensive care unit and me dad came round about half past ten at night and in he walked , he came straight down from Filey to see him , cos he used to think a lot of dad you see and dad did him years ago , he used to say he was more of a son than me own but then he brought her to the funeral , they would n't speak to me , would n't entertain me at all , I nearly fainted when I saw little one , she 's tall and thin |
18 | Then he laid her on the bed and feasted his eyes on her , slender and seductive , totally naked except for the glowing ruby that flashed fire whenever she moved her hand . |
19 | Then he ignored her for the rest of the evening . |
20 | Then he lowered her to the ground and shifted over her , and for a second it was like it had been before and fear touched her , but then his lips came down and brushed her mouth , and she was lost . |
21 | Then he pinned her against the wall , took up a karate stance and began punching her in the breast and armpit . |
22 | ‘ But then he got her into the trouble in the first place . |
23 | They passed through the hall again ; then he followed her across the lawn to where a rough wooden table was placed near the trunk of a large oak tree , to which was nailed an equally rough seat . |
24 | Then he pushed her into the bathroom and locked the door . |
25 | Then he threw her into the basin … |
26 | The figure turning the corner and walking heavily down the road could not under any circumstances have been Edward , but at least it relieved her from the suspicion that the street was uninhabited . |
27 | In the dark she could ignore how he repelled her in the light . |
28 | I knew when I saw her in the graveyard reading the writing . |
29 | Once a femur or a forearm would have played a pure note if you 'd used one for a pipe , but the pieces would whistle harsh and offkey now from the holes bored into them by the efficient mandibles of her companions in the vertical grave , the cenote where they placed her after the battle , during the truce . |
30 | They have found it hard , too , to make a bridge between the 11 years of Mrs Thatcher and the 16 months of Mr Major , to say what a wonderful woman she was , while being unable to explain why they threw her off the sledge . |