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

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1 He was looking at her for help — he was pleading , through his fury , for the assistance of his sister … it was just that , in his youth , he could not control the emotion in his face , and she quivered with the imagined rage , only now recognizing the desperation in his eyes .
2 One other peculiarity she shared with the four Atlantic states : she had great extra-European interests , though they lay across land frontiers in Asia rather than across the sea .
3 Before that , she lived with the old Lord Chamberlain .
4 She rose with the fluent movement of the athlete .
5 Most often she stands with the left foot forward ( a borrowing no doubt from the kouros , but it is not like his a full stride , rather so short a step as to seem like a dance-motion ) , left hand pulling the skirt to the side and letting a swag hang free , right forearm raised forward with an offering .
6 She staggered with the laden trug to where the buffers stood up like huge metal pennies on their sides preventing the train from going any further .
7 Barefoot , she moved with the natural sinuousness of her race , and looking beyond her , Loc saw Jacques Devraux lift his eyes momentarily from his plate to follow the swaying movement of her hips as she walked away from the table .
8 The researcher , unfortunately , has the same problems with testing this hypothesis , despite its greater precision , as he or she has with the grander ones .
9 Without consideration he ripped the tape from her skin so that she winced with the searing pain .
10 She has graded these goals in terms of difficulty ; she starts with the easiest things first .
11 Instead , she cooperates with the unique potential of each piece of glass , fully utilising qualities of opaqueness or opalescence , irregular textures , streaks and drifts of colour , within the dominant composition .
12 She woke with the tortured sound of ripped metal flailing against earth and stones .
13 She played with the sparkling ring on her finger .
14 to the park where she played with the stolen child .
15 Only when she fumbles with the tiny metal flap of my zip does my mind shake back to the present .
16 ‘ You have a slight fever , I think , ’ she replied with the quiet firmness she would have used towards any sick person .
17 Yet every time he laughed and his grin dazzled her she flinched with the deep-rooted need that stabbed like a vengeful sword .
18 Hussa was a large , enveloping woman with a large , enveloping sense of humour ; she walked with the rolling gait of a shore-bound sailor and her veils had such a haphazard permanence , you felt they were an outgrowth of her personality rather than a covering .
19 Quite glad to abandon what was turning out to be a very wet hunt , she walked with the little girl back to the hotel .
20 A week later she returned with the unfortunate animal in a box .
21 When she returned with the main meal , Penry sniffed ecstatically .
22 This remark she delivered with the immense complacency of the wise virgin ; Clara could not help but feel that having men in only when things went wrong was not as wildly eccentric as her mother supposed , but as she knew no other way , no other world , she could not be sure .
23 It was impressive how she coped with the two children for the twelve hours to Juliaca while her boorish husband slept , the baby 's shawl across his face .
24 She coped with the difficult conditions well to finish with a very creditable 2 hrs. 08 .
25 What hope would she have with the local police when the issue came down to her word against Guido 's ?
26 She worked with the regional adviser in religious and moral education and became involved in teacher' in-service training particularly concerning multicultural education .
27 Betty 's classroom practice changed whilst she worked with the advisory teacher , but the lack of congruence between her beliefs about mathematics and about how children learn and those behind the innovation , made it unlikely that such changes would be sustained once he left .
28 She worked with the local women at St. Martin 's , Elterwater , and in 1883 linen was being spun and woven again in the Langdale Valley .
29 Ey she looked with the red scarf who 's been having problems with it !
30 She struggled with the cold fear that had laid its hand on her : she had gone with a man , without protesting , without a single pledge from him , and not a word of kindness , not a promise for tomorrow ; she looked at Sabina 's back in front of her , the pinafore tied behind over her gathered skirt , and imagined her husband 's hands around that still sturdy small of her back , and wondered had she let him do that , do what Tommaso had done , before they were married ?
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