Example sentences of "she go [adv] [verb] " in BNC.

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1 After a few days , her hunger becomes so great that she goes away to feed , leaving her young in the charge of others .
2 My wife 's very religious now , she goes there to pray a lot . ’
3 Today , as one of Gorbachev 's advisers , she goes further to say that it has led to the formation of social groups with diverging interests and destroyed the rational relationship , however slight , that existed between work and money .
4 ‘ Where 's she going ter get 'er money from ? ’ asked Frankie .
5 Isabel had one quick glimpse of the fire smouldering in fitzAlan 's eyes as he lifted his head , then his mouth came down on hers in a kiss of such male dominance that she went completely limp .
6 And erm she 's just cooking the meal and she went upstairs went into her son 's bedroom , got his belt and hung herself and her children coming back from school and find that .
7 Then she went upstairs to tell Giovanna that she thought she would not be able to stay for her Italian lesson , because she felt so ill , and took herself painfully back across the Grand Canal to her temporary home .
8 She went upstairs to change , thinking how proud Arnold would have been of the way she had coped with the water shortage .
9 She went upstairs to change after luncheon and then took herself to the chair by her bedroom hearth , and said she should want nothing further , all afternoon .
10 She went upstairs to pack as soon as she could .
11 Remembering the cheque , she went upstairs to get it , she flattened it out and stared at the signature .
12 Why was it , Sally-Anne thought when she went forward to take it , that this pitiful sum seemed more precious to her than her huge allowance which she could claim any day she wished ?
13 Rearrested in May 1918 , from Holloway Prison she went forward to win the seat for St Patrick 's division , Dublin , in the December 1918 general election , the first woman elected to the British Parliament .
14 Smiling shyly , she went forward to meet them .
15 She went outside to talk to him , threatening all sorts of terrible punishments for anyone who misbehaved in her absence .
16 She dressed , she went downstairs to sit in an armchair .
17 When she went downstairs to make herself some toast it was still very dark , although it was eight o'clock and she could hear the children talking in their room .
18 Shivering inside her bathrobe , she went downstairs to seek the sun .
19 Then she went downstairs to find her mother .
20 She went downstairs to find David waiting for her , dressed in uniform , with his British warm over one arm .
21 At last , unable to delay confrontation any longer , she went downstairs to find Penry emerging from the study as she reached the kitchen .
22 In the middle , she went away to make tea , and brought it back with digestive biscuits she had broken into quarters .
23 But she seemed to have got over her momentary embarrassment , so he smiled at her as warmly as he could , and she went away to eat her solitary lunch in the small bed-sitting-room alongside the nursery , which was the only part of the Unit that was n't monitored with cameras and tape recorders .
24 But since she knew that the Czech word for ‘ please ’ was ‘ prosím ’ she was hoping that the polite woman 's parting phrase had been the equivalent of an English ‘ Excuse me , please ’ while she went away to hand her card over to Vendelin Gajdusek .
25 She went often to see his family .
26 Gratefully , she went across to take their order .
27 She went home to lie down .
28 Early in the evening she went home to get her brown envelope .
29 She went listlessly to answer a knock on the door and was amazed to see John there and to be swept into his arms .
30 Cos after she went there to see me , you spoil him .
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