Example sentences of "[art] [noun pl] she [verb] for " in BNC.

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1 Adam had viewed with near-incredulity his mother 's preparations in the past for going on holiday , the way everything in the house seemed to get washed , the way she and his father wore their worst clothes for days beforehand because the best ones were packed , the phone calls she made , the notes she left for tradesmen .
2 The illustrations she produced for the book were based on copies of old master paintings .
3 The illustrations she produced for the book were based on copies of old master paintings .
4 The reasons she advances for maintaining the book 's integrity are based on modesty of intention : it is better not to divulge the precise methods of punishment used by its Mrs Teachum , since the book is addressed less to teachers than to pupils .
5 The dimples she kept for emergencies suddenly appeared in Felicity 's cheeks .
6 The pictures she shot for the cinema were negligible compared to the pictures she shot for pure publicity .
7 The pictures she shot for the cinema were negligible compared to the pictures she shot for pure publicity .
8 Her conscious understanding of how she was using language is clear from the explanations she gives for the expressions she uses in the poem : ( on line 2 ) " She lived outside in the open , so the air was like her house " ; ( on line 5 " the streets were like a giant shop where she could pick and choose out of bins and gutters " ; ( on line 8 ) " this means she was close to nature and she felt like the yew was her mother " .
9 Even were he able to persuade her to marry him , somehow he could not envisage her being content to live on a ranch among a whole lot of strangers and without the luxuries she took for granted .
10 As she passed him to put away the files she hesitated for a moment , and instantly his hand shot out to take hers in a crushing grip .
11 IT will be a great relief to Abi King at the Arts Theatre if the props she needs for a new play can be turned up by the public at large .
12 She returned to the bedroom , slipped on pants and bra , then the overalls she wore for the factory .
13 And her behaviour could prove dangerous to the causes she speaks for . ’
14 And when she wore heels she was frequently taller than the men she worked for — a situation which , to her amusement and relief , they seemed to find slightly intimidating .
15 Mary had been brought up with her story which , for many in the valley — except her own generation , increasingly unable to visit her on the heights she chose for her seclusion — had gone cold long ago .
16 ‘ I suppose I could , ’ said Julia , thinking of the children she longed for , ‘ if there was something equally important I had to do .
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