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

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1 So then she cut through the dining room and into the lounge , where she found him sitting in front of the big Sony TV .
2 Mavis stands in the book shop writing the name and the things down you see and then she goes to the library , she has n't been out properly yet with her knee has she ?
3 Then she crept into the kitchen , stole an envelope and a stamp from the kitchen drawer , and ran to the corner to mail her letter before she could change her mind .
4 Mother answered , then she came into the sitting-room and announced , ‘ Clare 's coming home . ’
5 She nodded dismissively at Joe , who glared and stamped back to the pigs , and then she came into the milking house and leaned against the far wall , looking across at Jinny .
6 I said ju , I said to him then she came on the phone I was o ages on the phone and she said er I said you just take it as if it 's a day off and
7 Then she came to the conclusion that it might make things easier .
8 Then she went into the cottage and closed the door and I came out of hiding .
9 After she arrived home , she went to the bathroom for a quick wash and then she went to the kitchen to make a sandwich for the next morning at the factory .
10 Then she went to the sink and filled it with lukewarm water and made the water frothy with soap-powder .
11 Then she went to the prison to see Sarah .
12 Then she went down the stairs , collected her satchel and left the house by Phoebe 's front door .
13 Then she darted to the Jonquil
14 And then she glanced at the window ; the darkness outside was complete .
15 Then she continued in the sort of I'll-be-reasonable-if-you'll-be-reasonable tones adopted by the Russian government to , say , the Lithuanians .
16 Then she ran from the cloakroom , down the narrow dark passage and out into the night .
17 Then she passed into the square , tessellated hall with its stone fireplace , the hall which , on winter nights , seemed to echo faintly with the childish voices of Victorian rectors ' children and which , for Meg , had always held a faintly ecclesiastical smell .
18 Then she stared at the picture for a full minute .
19 Alexandra thought of calling her back , explaining that Mrs Chamberlin might regret her kind invitation to dine with them on Christmas Day if Alexandra were to upstage the Rectory family in such a way , but then she reflected on the goodness of Mrs Chamberlin 's heart and the necessity of living up to at least some of Lyddy 's expectations of her .
20 Then she stamped up the stairs .
21 Then she flopped on the sofa to sort through the letters .
22 Cocooned in an ivory tower of antique furniture and unfinished jigsaw puzzles , she spends an inordinate amount of time doing simple things like pouring hot water into a teapot ; then she gets on the telephone to her friends and either hangs up just as they reach the receiver or asks them if they would n't mind coming round to tea and picking up some skate from the fishmonger on the way .
23 Then she dawdled through the mews where the milk-horses were shod , and the blacksmith made new railings to put in front of the houses .
24 Then she got into the bed and waited for him .
25 ‘ I could have done without this , ’ she said , and then she got into the truck .
26 But then she seemed in the end she she picked it up .
27 Then she landed on the Market Square flagstones with a sickening crash to lie motionless .
28 Then she sits on the floor at Suzie 's feet .
29 Then she thought of the Brownie Promise and the Brownie Law and the Brownie Motto , all of which she knew by heart and had often said aloud when riding along the country lanes , so that she would be able to say them if the wonderful day should come for her to join a Brownie Pack .
30 Then she thought of the picture Graham always carried in his wallet of Carrie and Mikey .
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