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

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1 The following example comes from the interview with Sally Jordan , a factory worker and a dustman 's wife ; she belongs in the first group of working-class women whose early positive or non-committal response turns into predominantly negative feeling :
2 She lived in the Palestinian camp at Rashidiyeh , a wretched four square miles of breeze-block huts and cabins relieved only by the occasional tree , a straggling plant hanging from a poorly made brick wall and an open sewer that snaked uneasily down the centre of the mud roads .
3 She lived in the present tense of the school with its totally absorbing pattern of routine and minor rebellion .
4 Only she lived in the posh part , called Hove , and whenever people said ‘ You live in Brighton , do n't you ? ’ it was normal to reply ‘ Hove , actually ’ until it almost had become the name , Hove-Actually .
5 The larger female is more heavily marked , this helps to make her better camouflaged on the ground nest she builds in the Arctic spring , immediately after the snow begins to melt .
6 ‘ Sixteen coffees , ’ she announced in the cool voice that they seemed to be using to each other , ‘ followed by — er — ’ Consulting her list , she continued , ‘ Six rounds of toast , five boiled eggs with soldiers … ’
7 The second letter is difficult to place since Leapor is responding to a gentleman whose comments on her work are relayed by someone else , or to whom she refers in the third person for reasons of politeness .
8 ‘ Are you all right ? ’ she asked in the lowered tone that one uses in the darkness .
9 ‘ Not coming ! ’ she shouted in the dusty gloom .
10 JUDY MOWATT , one third of Marley 's backing singers , The I-Threes , is not rich , asking a hundred US dollars for an interview , but she lives in the better part of Kingston .
11 ‘ It could n't possibly have been Eddie who impersonated Delia and anyway there 'd have been no point when she lives in the same house as Angy . ’
12 She 's smiling softly as she stands in the dim glow , and she asks , ‘ Do you want to go to bed ? ’
13 She dabbled in the outer reaches of the publishing world from her position as a wife and mother : after the birth of Time Out she began to contribute to its nascent poetry section .
14 as if to lure her husband into a false sense of security , she pretended in the following year that she had gone to America and had hired a secretary , called Daisy Miller , to answer her correspondence in her absence : but she herself was Daisy Miller .
15 On behalf of all her fans , I would like to wish her the best of luck in 1992 and hope that she will carry on in the dedicated way she has in the past year or so .
16 She managed to give the would-be lawn a rough cut with an ancient mower she found in the outside store , and now she was tackling the border where already green shoots pierced the earth with promise .
17 She shrivelled in the icy blast of his scorn .
18 ‘ Yes , thanks , ’ Polly said over her shoulder , mentally crossing her fingers as she headed in the opposite direction towards her own cabin in the bow .
19 She pauses in the wrong places and puts emphasis on words which do not merit the stress , giving the effect of a halting delivery .
20 There was little hope of falling asleep again ; there never was when she woke in the early hours .
21 She woke in the early dawn and peered around her blearily through the heavy mist that filled the wood .
22 But the best of Eardley 's work are the landscape oils she painted in the final decade of her life .
23 She paddled in the shallow water for a few moments before joining Stephen where he was setting up the barbecue in a shaded spot .
24 She says in the longer term there are substantial benefits from returning organic matter to the soil .
25 She says in the old days women used to look out for each other 's children .
26 If she believed in the Prime Mover she would be praying .
27 Eh she looking in the large child ? because they shrink a bit in the wash .
28 He realises they are fighting only to ‘ gild ’ Menelaus ' horns ; and is disgusted by Cressida 's easy morals when she arrives in the Greek camp , kissing anyone that offers :
29 She drove in the middle lane , skimming past lorries .
30 Now and again , she came in the other day to meet a , a
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