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

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1 She insists the gruelling teaching process is fun but warns : ‘ Patience is most important for the training . ’
2 She slanted a challenging look at Claudia .
3 Looking at them , she experienced a curious sense of exclusion ; she wondered who the woman was ; she wondered how well Giles knew her .
4 She experienced a strong feeling of déjà vu , as if she 'd seen him before , as if she knew him .
5 As Louise moved away she experienced a powerful urge to grab the massager and tug it close to her secret places again but she did not dare .
6 Each time she read the story , she experienced a new shock ; it was the shock of finding the new contained and expressed in the framework and the terms of the old .
7 One fourteenth-century manuscript contains information about four : those of Catherine of Siena , the fourteenth-century Italian girl who became a Dominican tertiary and whose teaching based on mystical certainty of the reality of her union with Christ , with whom she experienced a spiritual visionary marriage , was given official Dominican patronage ; and three thirteenth-century Belgian mystics : Christina called Mirabilis from St Truden ; Elizabeth of Spalbeck , a Belgian recluse patronised by the Cistercians ; and the prototypical Beguine , Mary of Oignies , championed by Jacques de Vitry , the Bishop of Acres and later a Cardinal Legate at the court of Gregory IX who protected her and wrote her biography .
8 Wandering around looking at the different displays , she experienced a strange sensation of being drawn towards something .
9 Now angry frustration replaced satisfaction , and she experienced a little spurt of apprehension amid the bleak realisation that he had n't been speaking out of generosity after all .
10 The sound system 's speakers were like upended steamer trunks , one on top of another ; standing so close , the volume gave her a sensation in her ears like that of tearing paper and she experienced a few moments of sensory overload before she recognised the tune as New York , New York .
11 Alice 's father , a naturalized British subject since 1852 , indulged his wanderlust during Alice 's first fifteen years , and thus she experienced a constant change of scene and sound , living in New Zealand , Mexico , the United States , and Europe , until the family settled in Tonbridge in 1874 .
12 Yet Xanthe 's tidy existence felt mussed in Miranda 's company ; she experienced a sudden , vivid awareness of prohibitions hedging her about , and with the awareness , a desire to break them .
13 One woman described how she experienced an aggressive pattern : ‘ I found it very difficult to cope with women over me , especially if I thought that they were n't being fair — although I had no problems when dealing with men .
14 This measures the average number of children a woman would have if she experienced the prevailing age pattern of childbearing throughout her reproductive lifetime .
15 After protesting that she simply could n't share her bed with anyone else , she admitted the real reason : she was ashamed to let him see that she had to get up to pee once or twice a night .
16 Some weeks later , discussing the arts , she admitted the English sense of humour was difficult to understand initially , and only now could she laugh at my greeting of , ‘ Help , I am being bitten by a sanitary towel ! ’
17 Her left elbow was still stiff since her injury in the air raid and she failed a medical for heavier work .
18 She kicks the high-flying American banker out of the family home and he winds up renting a room in the home of lonely divorcee Monica .
19 She flung a petrified look back at his mother .
20 ‘ And I suppose that with your superior knowledge you 've worked out that this — scene of devastation — ’ she flung a careless hand in the general direction of the office ‘ — is all down to me .
21 She flung the inside door to one side , was about to slam it but changed her mind and closed it behind her in a quiet and controlled manner .
22 She flung the whole tangle of thought away from her and ran fast up the stairs as though in the room some delight or pleasure awaited her , not the hard task of painting .
23 When she was just about within striking distance , she flung the soaking bundle with all her might in his direction , shouted , ‘ Take that ! ’ and then ran , not waiting to see if she had hit the target or not .
24 She met no open hostility .
25 Eileen joined with them but before long she met a young man and started courting so dropped the dances .
26 In the village where Ng Mui eventually settled , she met a young girl named Yim Wing Chun , to whom she taught her system .
27 Cis was coming out of the Co-op one day ( hoping that Rich had not , yet again , taken some cigarettes and put them on her account ) , when she met a bristle-moustached Meredith Jones who demanded , ‘ How can you let him do it ? ’
28 Turning her head , she met a slow , sleepy smile from Ross as he , too , raised himself to a sitting position against the pillows .
29 When still unmarried , she met a penniless and obviously sick Frenchman who had lived in the South Seas and had come to Koraloona to paint .
30 ‘ Well , ’ said Lady Furness , ‘ a few months later she met a fine man called Ernest Simpson .
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