Example sentences of "[pers pn] [vb -s] [adj] [noun] [subord] " in BNC.

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1 In comparing oral and literate societies in terms of their education systems , for instance , she represents oral systems as decidedly inferior .
2 You know what I mean and erm she wants this job because she wants the money and , but I do n't really think that you know , she , she er , had the time to two jobs because she has three young children anyhow , I know that 's her problem , erm you know who looks after them or what .
3 But none of you has any choice because you all have reserved seats .
4 For the purpose of her own artistic practice , she has other heroes than the icons of high art and these are found amongst illustrators such as Arthur Rackham , Edmund Dulac , Beatrix Potter , and William Heath Robinson .
5 An occupational therapist makes sure she has such things as a walking frame , special lavatory seat and correctly shaped chair , and a district nurse visits each day .
6 She even pretends that she has higher principles than many of the other characters in the play :
7 ‘ Well , if it 's sexual she has less discrimination than I gave her credit for . ’
8 Yet , paradoxically , in another way she has more experience than most .
9 Your daughter does n't live extravagantly enough for it to be noticed that she has more money than the average student .
10 I am sure she has more cards than anyone else on her ward .
11 She has more servants than she knows what to do with .
12 There are very pressured days , says Jackie , when she has several visits as well a clinic , when she goes up every front path praying both mum and babe will be problem-free .
13 She has enough problems as it is . ’
14 She describes such factors as lip mobility and tongue-setting for English , French and other languages .
15 She describes another incident where a woman , reduced to tears by a senior colleague , began to realize that he was enjoying seeing her cry .
16 She uses such techniques as " sandwiching " negatives in the enlarger .
17 She eats cold babyfood because her father Steve , who cares for her , has no cooking facilities .
18 She arrives ten minutes after you get home .
19 And through her love also she shows great respect because the people that she 's dealing with are considered in Indian society to be the dregs of humanity .
20 While she concedes the broad outline of the developmental model — a model which proceeds from an egocentric through a societal to a universal perspective — she sees this development as taking place , in the case of women , within a special moral conception .
21 She sees this course as explicitly challenging some of the accepted norms of the rest of the course .
22 She prefers secondary school because ‘ there is more on ’ .
23 yeah , but she charges five pound cos there must of been some little bits over
24 If she makes an old-fashioned choice and lovingly tends a garden and a bumper crop of children , she rates louder Hosannas than ever before .
25 Urwin recognizes that dominant ideas of good motherhood appeal to women 's fantasies , but she endorses feminist prescriptiveness about maternity when she pictures these fantasies as mainly pernicious and restricting .
26 She continues this process until the young rabbits , born blind and hairless , have grown fur and are in need of food she can not supply .
27 She analyses such factors as the use of donated time , i.e. time given ‘ over the odds ’ , and the nature of formal and informal networks which supported the two old people .
28 She dislikes clinical method because ‘ years of clinical experience is not the same thing as empirical evidence ’ ( 1973 : 232 , 234 ) .
29 she , she knows this car when it goes by
30 She works ordinary hours so Anne 's not often free to go out with her now . ’
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