Example sentences of "she [vb mod] [verb] on [art] " in BNC.

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1 One goes on about it all the time , saying she must go on a diet , and start jogging and stuff , the other one does n't .
2 She must sit on the pot until it cool so the vapour can come up her inside , ’ the thin woman commanded .
3 She must remember on no account to go on thinking about that or she might let something slip .
4 It seemed to her she must have on every piece of jewellery the family owned .
5 she must have on the christening
6 She should look on the bright side , she kept trying to tell herself .
7 It was one of those cosmic accidents which are no accident , that the next day , when she called in at a bookshop to look for some more Morris titles , she should find on the same shelf the total output of Professor M. L. Vaughan ; and among the rest his : Aurae Phiala : A Pleasure City of the Second Century A.D. She took it down and opened it at random , and the prose caught her by its incandescent fervour .
8 And no , they had not been expecting to see her that weekend , though with Giles away she had said she might come on the Sunday .
9 That alone would be terrible without any danger she might encounter on the way .
10 He had even made a suggestion about a piece she might write on the role of women in the Tory Party , perhaps in the Government Whips ' Office .
11 I mean , she 'll go on a bus but no further , and we tried everything to get her to come to America — she would have loved to see me on Broadway , and she wanted to get there .
12 ‘ And she 'll transmit on the hour ? ’
13 She 'll sit on the toilet half shaped
14 She said she 'll come on a Sunday morning with me and I said
15 Mrs Falconer , a senior lecturer in textiles , has been told there is funding for only one textile lecturer in the school , but that she could remain on the staff if she accepted demotion to ordinary lecturer — a post already held by her sister , Barbara Diack .
16 She has , however , been informed that she could remain on the RGU staff if she accepted a demotion to ordinary lecturer — the post held by her sister , Mrs Barbara Diack , who , in turn , would lose her job .
17 Mrs Falconer is facing compulsory redundancy and has been told that she could stay on the staff if she accepts demotion to ordinary lecturer — a post already held by her sister , Barbara Diack .
18 She looked , however , as if she was fairly determined to give her views on the matter , but before she could start on the Why do they come over here if they do n't like it ? speech or her I believe in respecting people 's religious feelings but would die to defend their right to disagree with me speech , Maisie came round the door .
19 ‘ Well , she wo n't know if nobody tells her , ’ said Camille , but , in truth , she knew she could depend on the discretion of her friends .
20 Ruth surveyed the freshly-turned earth and looked around for a flower she could place on the grave , but it was the last day of December and there was nothing in bloom .
21 She could turn on the spot by rotating the cylinders fore and aft in opposite directions and at different speeds .
22 It was made all the more infuriating by the fact that she had dressed with more than usual care , splashing out far more than she could afford on a red silk jersey creation from an expensive boutique .
23 She slid in and around the one who was dressing , and set a couple of coffees down in what limited space she could see on the table .
24 She did n't know where this conversation was leading , but gut feeling told her that she could bank on the destination 's being rather unpleasant .
25 But at least she could write on the card , ‘ On examination nothing abnormal detected ’ .
26 She could count on the fingers of one hand the people she actually enjoyed having on the premises ; most of her other visitors she merely tolerated and a few of them had the power to make her feel violated .
27 And she 'd go on the demonstrations in it too , I 've seen her at a rally in a park dragging that beaded hem through the mud .
28 ‘ I knew she 'd have on an apron , ’ Carlie said to the social worker .
29 ‘ The next day she would always phone to say that she had been in and she 'd pick on a few things that she was n't quite happy with . ’
30 She pointed beyond a wooden pier to the place where she used to sit on a crate beside her father as he fished through the ice .
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