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

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1 Sometimes she goes to different places on the island to paint pictures . ’
2 She plays for higher stakes than the ones you can offer . ’
3 She records for Mute Records , who , as the the sales of Dépeche Mode show , are no slouches in distributing sounds to the masses .
4 Her red hair is like a bronze helmet , she dresses in beautiful suits , usually by her favourite designer , Torrente .
5 Widowed four years ago , she lives off two pensions left by her late husband .
6 This meant she could continue to level her basilisk stare ( the one which she reserves for special enemies ) at selected MPs .
7 A graduate in sociology and education at Florence University , she has for many years contributed articles to Protestant and ecumenical newspapers and currently writes a monthly survey on television for the journal Confronti .
8 Generally , the approach in this initiative is based on the conviction that the primary and most basic interface between the individual and the social world is to be found in the day to day transactions he or she has with other individuals .
9 The purpose of this interview will be to assess the elderly person 's financial needs , the income she has from all sources , and her capital ( if any ) , and to establish whether she is entitled to receive a supplementary pension or allowance .
10 She has in recent years been able to devote more time to dressmaking and tailoring — arts which she has perfected to professional standards .
11 Situating herself within the Anglo-Saxon analytic tradition , she looks at different conceptions of philosophy , its content and methods .
12 She traces the roots back in time ; she covers some of the more obvious ground ( with chapters on Happy Mondays , the Stone Roses etc ) ; she rights some wrongs ; she flirts with some myths ; she gives a platform to some of the previously unsung instigators ; she dumps a few reputations ; and , though imperfect , it 's as reliable a guide to current Manchester music as you are likely to get .
13 Pessimism is her distinguishing trait : she worries about many aspects of her work .
14 Then she stoops for some pebbles and warns that I 'd better come in now .
15 Jordanova suggests that the search to define femininity by recourse to anatomy was a search for aesthetic and moral ideals at the same time ; she says of these models , ‘ The figures of recumbent women seem to convey for the first time the sexual potential of medical anatomy . ’
16 That 's where we come in , ’ she says in hushed tones .
17 Mostly she deals with moral issues , though some are topical or ‘ tongue in cheek ’ .
18 The main concern of Out ( 1964 ) , Such ( 1966 ) , and Between ( 1968 ) is the process whereby the subject constructs his or her identity in and through the language of specialized discourses , and the way in which he or she acts on those discourses to make them ‘ run here and there again' .
19 The real value of regression therapy is demonstrated when the patient is aware of how he or she acts in certain circumstances but can find no reason for it at all .
20 She will also receive a £2.2 million advance for every film in which she acts plus another Pounds 500,000 for each one she produces .
21 Esther is keeping my letter until she hears of more complaints about faulty harnesses , leads or dog toys .
22 In addition to running courses , she responds to individual requests for advice and consultancy on various aspects of media work , such as how to approach the press and how to run effective publicity campaigns .
23 If you become over-protective of her when she growls at strange dogs , in her mind you will be ‘ rewarding ’ her and making your problem worse .
24 In Act I Scene V she calls to evil spirits , showing that she realises human feelings must be obliterated in the fight for power .
25 As she lands , she calls for several seconds and her baby answers .
26 She draws on subterranean forces to subjugate and control .
27 She distinguishes between those models that treat hemisphere specialisation as absolute , according to which a given function can only be performed by a particular hemisphere , and those that regard specialisation as relative .
28 Again , Diana was forced to turn to the small group of friends she regards as unofficial advisers .
29 ‘ I did n't know the lady as well as you , sir , but she seems in all particulars to have been a pretty clubbable woman . ’
30 She perceives with awake senses .
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