Example sentences of "[to-vb] her through [art] [noun] " in BNC.

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1 Luke came round the car and took her arm in a firm grasp to lead her through the gate and up the path to the front door .
2 He was toting the gun for a purpose — to shoot her through the head or knock her unconscious , or both .
3 An hour or so was spent drafting a new outline for this second approach on the mysteries of the Coniunctio and , when she was satisfied that its thread was strong enough to guide her through the maze , she took up again the pursuit of Mercurius through the bridal-chambers of the mind .
4 After Titania 's quatrains — the most artificial verse-form in drama , presupposing as it does that the speaker has four lines already prepared , with rhymes , confident of not being interrupted — Bottom 's prose truly belongs to the world of unromantic everyday appetites : Bottom may have been ‘ translated ’ in shape , but nothing can elevate him to verse and romance — apart , ironically enough , from his role as Pyramus , out of whose Pistol-like doggerel he is ever ready to step in order to explain the play : ‘ She is to enter now , and I am to spy her through the wall .
5 If only Craig was at her side it would be so different , she needed his strength to see her through the ordeal , not only of the funeral but of the days and weeks that were to come .
6 Her parents travelled home in the first week of October leaving her with fields enriched by the presence of a few dozen sheep and enough advice to see her through the cow 's first calving and the sow 's first litter .
7 Her emotions felt fragmented ; all thought of a businesslike façade to carry her through the afternoon seemed meaningless .
8 Yet if Elizabeth relied more heavily than her predecessors on direct taxation to carry her through the years of peace , she showed a greater reluctance than her father to squeeze the country heavily in times of war .
9 Gina had remained silent after Rune 's surprise announcement , allowing him to conduct her through the gates and across the road to the Mercedes .
10 As it was , she had to draw on reserves of courage she had n't even known she possessed just to get her through the opening number .
11 ‘ Not that fair field of Enna where Prosepene , gathering flowers , herself a fairer flower by gloomy diss was gathered , which costs series all that pain to seek her through the world .
12 To plot her through the infinities of the stems .
13 Not if I have to drag her through every court in the land …
14 But it took a trained observer to follow her through the quicksands of her disapprobation ; a false step on the part of one of the aunts , for instance , could have reversed her attitude , and led her into a eulogy of black , into a martyred position whence the garments of all the others were an insult to her lone and exclusive widowhood , into a position where she alone had the right to flout the weight of tradition .
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