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

  Next page
No Sentence
1 ‘ I hope not , ’ Sophie said involuntarily , then flushed as she met the others ' surprised looks .
2 they are , she got the forms er but it did n't go and you 'd got to fill them in and then it happened with , but then suddenly she came home one day and she said oh she said I 've got a job
3 She was a bit shaky but she got the children 's breakfast and cleared up Bob 's .
4 During a visit to Darlington Memorial Hospital , where she visited the children 's ward , Ms Harman said the Government was starving the NHS of resources while building up the private sector .
5 One Guy Fawkes ' night , she found the children 's bedroom window shattered and a half-brick on the floor , so Peter tacked chicken wire across the frame inside .
6 ‘ How 's your mother , Nurse Avery ? ’ asked Sister Robinson , as she approached the nurses ' station where Juliet was studying Bobbie Cole 's test results .
7 The 20 year old student was attacked as she used the women 's toilets near the Martyr 's Memorial in the centre of Oxford .
8 She had tried to put matters right in the proper manner from within the system , but that had n't worked , and she believed the Children 's Hearing system was at risk in Orkney .
9 Joyce Barr was again in commanding form as she lifted the ladies ' title bearing Margaret Holligan of Economics .
10 For quite other reasons she joined a women 's therapy group , and in the course of the work stumbled into the unrealized intensity of the pain her barrenness was causing .
11 So she joined the Women 's Royal Naval Service .
12 She joined the Women 's Social and Political Union and became its joint honorary secretary .
13 Shortly after her return to England in 1911 , she joined the Women 's Freedom League ( WFL ) , a militant non-violent organization concerned with the extension of suffrage and other rights to women .
14 It is from this perspective that she approaches the women 's issue .
15 Initially she welcomed the professionals ' involvement because she believed this might result in help and advice in identifying the reasons for Tom 's deteriorating behaviour .
16 As a mother , she says she sees the parents ' point of view .
17 But she fears the embers ' flicker and the night closing in over chill ash .
18 Again she heard the boys ' warm approving voices , voices that left her outside the heat of that dangerous moment .
19 Her mother was so concerned that she rang a parents ' help-line .
20 In 1951 came the excitement of the MEdaus ' visit ; the next year Hilda became the Society 's first reassurer ; then in preparation for her move to Weston-Super-Mare in 1961 , she took the leaders ' training .
21 She took the men 's cheers as somehow directed at herself , at her person , not at the food alone , but unlike the chorus that might greet the appearance of some women of the town , they did not place her in danger , and she allowed herself a small smile in acknowledgement , and came forward to set the dish down .
22 She requests the children 's help and advice .
23 The telephone call was made , and Margaret , heard amid the distant screams of children quarrelling , gushed that it was a darling-idea and she would telephone the Advent herself , since she knew the women 's editor well .
24 And you could see just from the body-language that she felt the policemen 's warning was unjustified .
25 And you could see just from the body-language that she felt the policemen 's warning was unjustified .
26 Scottish international Lynn Harding , preparing for the Stockholm Marathon at the end of the month , set a course record when she won the women 's race by over four minutes from Durham City veteran Julie Coleby .
27 She had no travellers ' tales , no air of a person who had been on a journey , and I knew she would be both disbelieving and resentful if I should try to describe the eternal vistas I had glimpsed .
28 She had the men 's undivided attention .
29 Meanwhile at Thorey Island , one of the groups is under the charge of Corporal Alison Miller , Whose civilian job is as a secretary , but at weekends she becomes a Women 's Royal Army Corps Provost NCO .
30 She grumbled to me that if she left the tap-handles in situ , people would take advantage and lie in their baths for hours on end , using a lot more hot water than their franc entitled them to .
  Next page