Example sentences of "she [vb past] [adv prt] the [adj] [noun sg] " in BNC.

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1 Satisfied with the merest hint of make-up she had used on her heart-shaped face , she emptied out the small jewellery sachet she always took with her on her travels .
2 After hitching her cover more firmly round her shoulders she made up the smouldering fire and sat on the pouffe .
3 Her eyelids fluttered and she went deathly white , but she fought back the dizzying sensation , her hands coming up to brace herself against fitzAlan 's chest while the world righted itself .
4 She fought back the sudden urge to run to him , to fling herself into his arms and beg his forgiveness .
5 Resting her head wearily against the hard banister rail , she fought down the momentary surge of panic .
6 She sought out the darkest room and even then closed the shutters , though it was only early morning , and lay on her bed without energy even to feed her son .
7 She choked down the sudden lump in her throat , rejecting a surge of self-pity she had no need for .
8 It should have been a new beginning , a clean slate but , as she rode out the following morning , her head clouded from lack of sleep , Kelly knew that life was never that easy .
9 She straightened out the dead woman , folded her hands and tidied the bed .
10 She helped up the old woman who insisted on seeing her out , and drew the curtains for her .
11 Then , in the very same breath , she snatched up the toppled coffee-cup and flung the lukewarm contents in his face .
12 But as she lapped up the five-star treatment on the champagne Concorde flight , angry pensioners were facing a bleak future .
13 She blanked out the sudden picture of white sands and her and Lucy in a scented olive-grove evening … her heart panted to slake its thirst with dreaming , but she slammed the scenes of happiness as illusion , mirage .
14 Perhaps she was a bit like that as a child , Dexter sometimes wondered , always eating the pastry round the outside of a tart before she gobbled up the fruit-crammed centre .
15 She gulped down the proffered glass of Coca-Cola quickly .
16 After the stale fug in the tiny cabin , she gulped down the clean sea air , the car window wide open .
17 She lifted down the big suitcase from the top of the wardrobe , and , placing it on the bed , began to fill it , folding the garments as carefully as Isabelle would have done .
18 She lifted out the illuminated psalter within and handed it to him .
19 She drove down the wide west London avenue .
20 However when the party broke up and he offered her a lift home , she was quick to negotiate secretly with her hostess for her bike to remain unmentioned in the stairwell until she came back the next day to collect it .
21 When she came back the next day the stripes had been dyed her natural brunette , but badly , so that her hair still seemed striped , hence her nickname , Bunte .
22 Granted this authenticity even for the symbol , she came back the next day , nobly escorted .
23 She came back the next day .
24 Out of the window , as she hastened down the spiral staircase , Mildred saw the fires which were being lit in the ruins of the old castle where the celebrations were always held .
25 She threw out the uncomfortable question , its pain-filled answer .
26 She shook off the treacherous thought ; Dana was her twin and she loved her with all her faults — goodness knew , she had enough of her own .
27 She turned down The Fabulous Baker Boys , a film which made Michelle Pfeiffer an international superstar and an Oscar nominee , because ‘ I felt it was n't right for me ’ .
28 She handed over the small package , and then ran her gaze once more over the chaos in the office .
29 She thrust back the bright patchwork quilt and levered herself to a sitting position , her feet dangling over the edge of the bed .
30 ‘ I loathe and detest you , Luke Travis , ’ Merrill whispered later , as she hung up the pink dress .
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