Example sentences of "she [vb -s] [adv] [prep] [adj] " in BNC.

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1 she goes on about all this but they do n't say how much it 's gon na cost , never mind the storage heaters
2 She goes on in formulaic terms : ( " He [ my husband ] loves me and I love him well ; our love is as true as steel " )
3 But whereas Eleanor Bowen once used drawing as a means of recording for posterity what was immediately in front of her eyes , I am thinking in particular of those powerfully smudged charcoal drawings of the interior of Darlington Railway Station nowadays she goes far beyond this to evoke the feelings of considerable ill and unease .
4 This can be reduced a little if she goes in with all she needs for the first few days : a clean dressing-gown , slippers , a change of night clothes and bedjacket and all the toilet articles and other small items she is likely to want .
5 And she said wait here Mr and in she goes in to this bloody meeting and out he came .
6 She 's with a boy our age — a toy boy — and though he deserts her for young girls and even beats her up — she 's such a sucker for punishment , she goes back for more .
7 But I suppose you get insight er twenty per cent was she ca n't outrun him I think this bit she gets killed and she turns up in Little England , this come on .
8 You 're meant either to run a mile , or else collapse back happily : oh yes , if she turns out like that , I can more than handle it .
9 [ To ] Mary Leapor , I award the palm … she writes here with rare skill , reason and imagination on woman in society , knocking askew any easy line-up of ‘ new ’ with ‘ realist ’ by doing so in the general manner of Pope , with whom she has no need to fear comparison .
10 Because she is doing what is clearly a test , the words she writes down in this list have no real context : she would probably not write in the course of a story " I heard a funny nose … " without recognising the error herself when she read it back .
11 Cogan was a Fifties singer who died tragically young ; but in Burns ' brilliant intermingling of fact and fiction , she lives on into middle age to examine her portrait in the basement of the Tate , meet her most obsessive fan , and discover her strange links with Moors murderer Myra Hindley .
12 She could receive more if she lives well into old age .
13 She lives there with four of her seven children who remain alive , and her tiny grandson .
14 She lives now in converted weaving cottages in Kilbarchan , a walled garden already rich in spring colours .
15 She cares deeply about environmental issues and is a true blue ‘ green ’ .
16 You know perfectly well that your husband 's mother lives at a considerable distance , in point of fact in a suburb of Sheffield , and that she has never at any time offered to look after your children . "
17 Yes , Dorothea thought , I would enjoy her company , she would take me out of myself , for she has never for one moment lost her grip upon life , her grasp of a situation , her confidence .
18 Oh I bet she looks forward to that does n't she ?
19 She looks round in mock horror .
20 He looks up at her inquiringly and she looks away with another slight frown .
21 ‘ No she looks more like one of those cheap broads in the chorus . ’
22 Cilla Black as she looks back at some of the funniest moments in the success of her matchmaking series .
23 could n't tell you but er these cars turned up erm , there were n't no hearse and off they went and er course when I went up the garden to get some washing in Claire came up and er anyway she said er about Mr and I said well I assume it was him , I saw Mrs and she starts on about this dog barking out in the garden again !
24 An' she drops in for another little drop ,
25 he says to me , he said tell your mum we 're gon na have three weeks in France , we 're gon na be drinking , going out and huh , picking up prostitutes , see what she says to that and if she says okay to that , we 'll go anywhere
26 L. Stettner quotes Sachs : She quotes also from other studies to show that these co-operatives are better able to survive under adversity than are conventionally organised plywood manufacturing firms , and why : in a phrase , higher productivity , so much higher as to result in some cases in value added per labour-hour of more than twice that of those firms .
27 Now she sings instead with local choirs .
28 She hangs about with some erm half-ca I think she 's black but she , she 's light .
29 She keeps on about all the time , every time I 'm there .
30 She breaks down in public soon afterwards .
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