Example sentences of "[conj] she [verb] [prep] [pos pn] " in BNC.

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1 Home was Croydon , where she lived with her divorced mother in a council flat , supported by social security , supplemented occasionally by haphazard maintenance payments from her father , who was in the Merchant Navy and had not been seen since Val was five .
2 Aged 18 , she was given £50,000 from the fund to buy her famous Colherne Court flat , where she lived until her engagement to Charles .
3 Mrs license returned home after two weeks in hospital where she died from her cancers
4 Brenda continues in Creole until just before " but to dance " , then switches back to London English for the last part of her turn , where she continues with her narration of actual events : " and then and then we star%ed to talk and all the rest of it and tha% " s it " — but switches to Creole for her final " punchline " : " full stop .
5 ‘ I 'm not involved with Mr Wyatt , ’ Claudia said , walking quickly into her office , where she settled at her desk with a determined look on her face .
6 A few days later the Troop were shown aerial photographs of five tugs towing the sinking ship towards a sandbank , where she settled with her cargo of 5,000 tons of copper .
7 In leaving the room , swelling for the first time with tears , she had collided awkwardly with Gordon 's mother , who supposed she could stand where she liked in her own house , and even if Edward had called after her , she would not have been able to hear him .
8 And the angry princess , she , too , died where she sat on her horse ; a boghole opened at her feet and she sank into it .
9 Once inside he left her in a dim , dingy room where she sat with her bundle and the firm belief that the cruel joke would soon be over and she 'd be taken back to her ward .
10 Abigail was placed in permanent care at the age of three in a mental hospital where she remained until her death in 1971 .
11 She was carried screaming from the siege house , where she lives with her parents .
12 The ‘ Do you remember when ? ’ stories can be so important in getting to know the person who has died , in hearing about how he or she appeared to their surviving family and friends .
13 It was during those months of waiting that she felt in her heart that her husband was once again seeing Camilla .
14 Sun glinted off the water and the golden light was so pellucid , so dazzling , that she felt in her bag for her sunglasses .
15 Is it seriously suggested that she break with her old allies because of her lack of sympCOMMAND FILE ABORTED. athy for their mental health reforms ?
16 Suddenly then Fabia became overwhelmingly conscious of her thin cotton robe , her scrubbed face with her hair , brushed out of its knot , now floating around her — and it all at once seemed more urgent that she return to her room with all speed .
17 that she wore for her mum 's , it 's peach
18 It seems likely that the visions of the devils and of Christ that she saw during her first breakdown were actual hallucinations , as were the later seeing of obscenities , and what she called the ‘ flickering ’ of the Sacrament .
19 And yet it was not the face of her customer that she saw in her mind , but the strong lean jaw and the dark unfathomable eyes of a stranger .
20 She had hated the pity she thought that she saw in her mama and papa 's eyes , and when her papa had suggested that she might like to spend a year in London with her Uncle Orrin , be presented at court , meet his old friend the Prince of Wales , now King Edward VII , again , she had agreed with alacrity — she , who had hated being parted from her mama and papa .
21 It was of no help to her inner disquiet , as she left her room , that she saw in her mind 's eye a picture of the aristocratic-looking Ven Gajdusek .
22 What does the patients charter offer to the woman in Wandsworth who last month found that she could not have her second child in the hospital that she chose for her first child because her health authority has no contract with that hospital ?
23 He confiscated two apples that she had in her handbag , and warned her about penalties for importing plant and vegetable matter .
24 It was at this point , partly because I was so nervous , that I felt it necessary to build her weight up a little , so I fed her up and overdid it , with the result that she got above her ideal flying weight .
25 It was then that she looked into his eyes and went cold with shock .
26 But he did not feel that she looked upon their amorous exchanges as more than innocent dalliance .
27 He went to her and put his arm round her shoulders , dimly aware that he might have hurried her but still convinced that she longed for his comfort and protection .
28 In front of Ruth an old woman , not moving quickly enough to please them , was thrown so heavily that she landed on her back on the deck and was too winded to rise .
29 Maggie explained that she lived with her sister and brother-in-law , and how all this was a new start for her .
30 He discovered that her name was Bathsheba Everdene , and that she lived with her aunt , Mrs Hurst .
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