Example sentences of "she [verb] [v-ing] a [noun sg] " in BNC.

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1 Claire was delighted at the improvement She tried drinking a glass of milk , to see what would happen , and 24 hours later Jamie , following a feed , suffered , a severe attack of colic .
2 Mum could see she was getting nowhere so she tried shedding a tear or two .
3 Meanwhile , Miss Thomas was breathing and a pulse was still discernible but , according to a statement from an inspector at the station , she stopped breathing a minute or so before an ambulance arrived at 1.33 a.m .
4 But I had n't asked her to do so , and when she began making a nuisance of herself I told her she 'd have to leave our office there .
5 The irony of the situation hit her as she began preparing a meal from the provisions she 'd brought with her .
6 She enjoyed uncovering a corner of brick enough to insert the trowel blade beneath it and twist , and prise it slowly out of its bed .
7 She started eating a cream cake .
8 Then she started reading a recipe .
9 Would n't miss a meetin' , an' one day she started goin' a bit funny .
10 Andrew Cook , of Brinkburn Road , Darlington , was infatuated with the young girl and went to the shop where she worked carrying a kitchen knife , Teesside Crown Court was told yesterday .
11 She thought enforcing a distinction would simply become bureaucratic .
12 She commenced wrapping a blood pressure cuff around his arm .
13 Her answer machine er she 's got two answer machines cos she so when the other wo she kept having a lot of trouble with it , kept breaking down and it 'd go away for three weeks and she 'd be without it
14 When pressed she also said she remembered catching a glimpse of David Parkin going out of the room .
15 She remembered reading a biography of a Tsarist émigré after the Revolution and the phrase came back to her .
16 One childless career woman described the scene when she discussed having a child and giving up work for a while .
17 The First Granny , as Mrs Bush is becoming affectionately known , marched up to the uniformed bell-ringers beside the big Christmas tree , put ten bucks into the Big Red Kettle , and loudly announced how much she preferred patronising a mall that had the sense to permit the Salvation Army .
18 She liked having a place of her own , where she could come and go as she pleased .
19 And here 's me dyin' to go and him , ’ she said waving a finger at George , ‘ havin' all the chances , and him hating books . ’
20 She likes painting a lot .
21 Her visit lasted just over an hour and a quarter , and she left holding a birthday card for Prince Harry that had been made by the refuge children .
22 She stood lighting a cigarette and looking at my mother out of the corners of her eyes .
23 For a moment or two she sat watching a breeze ruffle the calm surface of the hotel pool — the bright blue water was so inviting that the moment you got out you wanted to get straight back in again .
24 She sat crumbling a beer mat between her fingers .
25 So what was wrong with her ? she asked herself for the hundredth time as she sat sipping a glass of wine in his apartment in the Barbican some weeks after they 'd first met .
26 It was lunchtime , so she suggested having a drink in the Flask .
27 Bringing her mind back to the keys she suggested having a photograph taken so that there would be a record of them if it was ever needed .
28 Before leaving Brooklyn for London , she did some off-Broadway productions , went to the High School Of Performing Arts and was disappointed when she missed getting a part in Fame because she was too young .
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