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

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1 But in the final weeks she began to fall , and I organized a home help and district nurse .
2 ‘ Flick 's made a hit , ’ Gay observed that night , strolling into Breeze 's bedroom clad in the patched pyjamas she had worn at school .
3 In the small hours she woke , her heart beating .
4 More than 2,700 children went through the paediatrics department at Middlesbrough General in the five months she was there .
5 She would ‘ have to make a very special effort ’ to build the links with other professionals — GPs , the police , consultants and others on which she had barely had time to start in the five months she was there .
6 Her successes include winning the 1987 Gosforth Junior Open , the 1988 Tyneside G.C. Girls ' title and selection for the Durham County girls ' team for whom she had a 100 per cent record in the four matches she played .
7 ‘ We are at the bedside of the girl and are now starting to piece together what happened to her in the six hours she was in the hands of this maniac .
8 A short distance away were the Santerres : Sir John shouting orders and beside him his wife , riding side-saddle , her desire to leave apparent in the agitated remarks she made to her husband .
9 In the early scenes she sometimes seems less like a human than a terrified wild animal , and she is in extraordinary form in her first public apppearance at Mrs Higgins 's tea party , moving with the stiffness of an automaton and speaking in a voice that sounds like a Martian after a course at the Berlitz .
10 In the early days she had been stung by criticism of the way she dressed .
11 In the early days she had had lots of quiet opinions , he remembered , which she had offered him , shyly slyly , couched as a kind of invitation or bait .
12 If in the early days she was chiefly responsible for shifting a lot of blue eyeliner and baseball caps , she gradually became an inspiration to the frail , the disadvantaged and the miserable .
13 In the early days she would go for an evening ‘ burn up ’ in her car around central London , leaving her armed Scotland Yard bodyguard behind .
14 But in the 200 metres she finished second , three metres down on Retchakhan , whose time of 24.9 was a divisional record .
15 I told her to forget this doctor nonsense and talk more reasonably about the oilman and his petrodollars and what he had her do In the dying moments she made a noise I 'd never heard her make before , a rhythmical whimpering of abandonment or entreaty , a lost sound .
16 In the eight years she 's been showing the plants she 's won hundreds of awards .
17 It is also significant that the steam turbine and the pneumatic tyre were the only major British innovations of this period ; in the new industries she was a long way behind Germany and the United States and by 1914 was falling behind even in the older industries in which she had first established her supremacy .
18 In the first days she said her one hope was that her children , isolated though they were , could feel ‘ held ’ in the same safe way .
19 But it did make a difference — she realized that in the long hours she lay awake thinking about it .
20 When arrested , Allitt weighed 13 stone , but in the following months she became anorexic , refusing to eat , and her weight plunged to around seven stone .
21 She was also asked to keep a diary of her week , monitoring the extent of her sense of achievement and pleasure in the various situations she was in .
22 ‘ It is true that in the eighteen years she has been here I have never heard her speak .
23 Business had been good in the few weeks she had been in charge , but she was astute enough to realise that many of the customers had been coming to the club simply to see her .
24 There were photographs of her in the few parts she had been able to play in the years following her marriage ; photographs of her in youth , when her father had begun to launch her on the career which would be interrupted by the coming of Paul .
25 In the old days she 'd not had time to think about anything except how to keep out of trouble .
26 In the old days she and Adam had often come to Starr Hills ; it was lonely , with no one to shout ‘ Crazy Demdykes ’ after them , and they 'd played intense , obsessive games of treasure-hunting amongst the junk .
27 In the old days she would 'ave joined the Salvation Army . ’
28 Dana had been badly shaken ; her clothes were dusty and there was a tear in the red shorts she was wearing .
29 Even in the worst hours she never gave any public impression that she was on the ropes .
30 It was strange , too , Anne thought , that everyone got on with their normal lives , in spite of the constant raids and disturbed nights , and had become used to seeing servicemen in so many different uniforms thronging the streets and the cinemas , and in the public houses she was sure , although she had never been in one .
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