Example sentences of "she [verb] [verb] at [art] " in BNC.

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1 ‘ Are you listening to me ? ’ he demanded when she failed to laugh at the right point .
2 It 's a week away she got washing at the moment .
3 She bent to tug at the covering , found it securely fastened .
4 On Monday morning , she reported to work at the Swift building on Des Voeux Road .
5 Do you know I ca n't remember the date , early part of March , early part of March , erm what she says at the moment is that er someone else from the college is going to Leicester next Wednesday when Helen 's going to Cardiff and this girl is then going to Cardiff when Helen should be going to Leicester , so Helen says , and she wants to look at the same subjects as what Helen does so Helen says that they 're gon na sort of go to the different colleges and compare notes when they come back from it so she might need n't want to go to Leicester
6 She wants to play at the highest standard .
7 The feminists had divined that , who once , when she rose to speak at a meeting , had hissed and cat-called , assuming her crowning glory to be the seductive and marketable product of an inhumanely tested bottle .
8 She tried to look at the thing calmly and sensibly , tried not to be aware of Deana and Sarah whispering at a table only a few yards distant , but felt too hurt and shocked to be rational .
9 For four days the slimmer knows that all he or she has consumed at the end of each day is the 1,000 calories contained in the meals .
10 This is all she has to do at the beginning of the week .
11 She has sung at the Banff Centre in Canada , for Opera Roundabout , at Covent Garden and for the Royal Opera at the Donmar Warehouse .
12 She has spoken at the UN and given lectures abroad in which she has tried to draw attention to Central America 's most beautiful and most tragic republic .
13 She stopped struggling at the sound of her name , and his hand dropped from her face .
14 She stopped to look at the two houses , Brier and Rose , like identical twins wearing slightly different clothing so that one could tell them apart .
15 The women 's ability to contribute towards the cost is assessed and she needs to know at the outset what she will be asked to pay .
16 She 'd stood there , shivering with the cold , her already ragged clothes ripped further by the rough handling she 'd endured at the hands of the militia .
17 Her handbag had fallen behind the car seat when she 'd stopped at the traffic lights in town so several minutes were lost as she scrabbled for her pass , then when she drove into the car park she could n't immediately find a space and had to drive round several times .
18 If she 'd confessed at the beginning it would n't have been so bad , but how could she tell them now ?
19 Nancy was standing in the middle of the yard with her hands to her face , shouting about a black bogey she 'd seen at the window of the hayloft .
20 She recognized all the people she 'd seen at the dinner table in the Llandogger Trow and at the Frolic .
21 Watching , Jess was reminded of a pack of alley cats she 'd seen at the rear of Samson 's smithy one night .
22 After the initial wave of guilty surprise , finding that the beautiful girl she 'd seen at the market had been Roman 's younger sister , she 'd taken an immediate liking to Anneliese .
23 Clad in an old black leotard and leggings , now fairly well daubed with paint , and with her mane of hair hidden beneath a scarlet bandana , she did n't exactly look like a decorator , she realised with a giggle as she caught sight of her own reflection in the hall mirror on the way to the kitchen , but she 'd discovered at an early stage of the game just how much bending , stretching and crouching was involved and so had decided she might as well be comfortable while she did it .
24 Maggie found herself staring directly into the eyes of the young man she 'd noticed at a setting loom on her first day .
25 She 'd called at the library on her way home and borrowed some books on the Dordogne .
26 Travelling all day yesterday , she had subsisted solely on British Rail sandwiches and her supper had consisted only of the cereal and milk she 'd bought at a small general store in the nearest hamlet .
27 Sandra , but she preferred Sandy , told us that she 'd worked at the Exhilarator for five months but was just biding her time before she could move away from her mother and get her own place in London .
28 Fortunately she 'd learnt at a very early age never to be taken in by good looks alone .
29 Anyway she 'd knocked at the door and er , I said to her oh I do n't have to buy anything and she said no , no and erm
30 The first couple of times she 'd arrived at a rendezvous and then lost her nerve , backing out before anyone could approach her ; but then she 'd tried getting herself a little drunk beforehand , and from then on the doors were flung open and she was away .
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