Example sentences of "she [verb] [verb] with the [noun sg] " in BNC.

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1 She has lived with the shame and humiliation all these years .
2 It is said on the river that a Thames barge , once she has risen with the tide , never sinks completely .
3 As the weeks go by she begins to receive visitors at the refuge and when she begins to feel the marriage is over , with the workers ' help she starts negotiating with the council and housing associations for a new flat , although she also feels the refuge is home , a safe space that is becoming more and more difficult to leave .
4 When Alison stepped back into the bedroom the slight drop in temperature immediately sought out the damp patches on her back and shoulders that she 'd missed with the towel .
5 She 'd arranged with the school for me to see her results and report later when she phoned from the villa .
6 She 'd agreed with the head lad that there was no need for him to get up extra early , but he 'd insisted on leaving Shine On 's feed already made up .
7 After she 'd returned with the coffee shop order and sorted out everybody 's change , Josie said to her , ‘ Take a seat in the chair . ’
8 Nevertheless she 'd put it round her neck and there it had stayed ever since while she 'd tried with scant success to forget the brief period of ecstasy she 'd shared with the man whose gift it had been .
9 ‘ What 's she got to do with the matter in hand ? ’
10 What does she plan to do with the photograph ? ’
11 She began to play with the string of amber glass beads round Anna 's neck ( Oxfam Shop , Woodborough ) .
12 She started to doodle with the tape as accompaniment .
13 She started to wrestle with the nearside door , but Ward had locked it and in the end she gave up , lying back again and muttering something about remembering now .
14 Eventually she learned to ride with the help of a neighbour .
15 Her attitude is that she wishes to continue with the treatment which she was receiving when the hearing of this appeal began .
16 Margaret Townsend had spend some time helping her sister with the large growing family , especially during the frequent pregnancies , and she had lived with the poet 's mother in Stow Hill , Newport , until the move to London .
17 And all the time , she thought as she sat at her desk nursing the remains of her hangover , Angy had been dead in her little one-room flat , alone and open-eyed , lying where she had fallen with the knife in her throat and her lifeblood flooding her lungs .
18 She had to live with the memory of the death of many of her fellow-workers .
19 The letter asked Diana if she had co-operated with the author .
20 She had toyed with the idea of doing volunteer work with the homeless , but had done nothing about it .
21 Hunter , then 27 , picked up Heidi as she hitch-hiked along the A10 to visit her boyfriend , who she had rowed with the day before .
22 Unfortunately , ’ she went on , her voice heavy with sarcasm , ‘ he never actually got round to marrying my mother so , on top of everything else , she had to cope with the stigma of an illegitimate child . ’
23 Anyone with a spark of humanity would want to help a poor girl left defenceless and hard up , especially when she had to cope with the rearing of a young child , single handed .
24 We talked about the moths for a bit , and then someone asked what she had done with the mask .
25 She had dealt with the guilt years ago and put it behind her , but here he was , reviving it with his ruthless logic .
26 She thought guiltily of the money she had been spending on new clothes and of the new slippers she had ordered with the amethyst decoration .
27 Sometimes she had to help with the weaving , and her fingers were sore from bending stems round the spokes .
28 She went upstairs to change , thinking how proud Arnold would have been of the way she had coped with the water shortage .
29 Nevertheless , some spark of remaining pride had driven her to array herself in a sprig muslin gown she had bought with the peach , topped by a pretty chipstraw bonnet that at least provided a little place to hide her face under its poking brim .
30 Matadial referred in some detail in her evidence to five or six occasions between October 1986 and the end of the year when she had discussed with the defendant his frequent beating and threatening of Paulette .
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