She is up for almost any question, though she famously declines those concerning her love life and the father of her two sons. |
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She was built in 1966 and ran aground on 24 April 1978 while carrying bags of cement to Port Sudan. |
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She didn't even so much as shed a tear the day she'd run her bike into a brick wall when she was nine. |
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She was humming softly as she ran water from the tap and poured it into the coffee maker. |
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She looked up and saw the bruises forming on his face and the blood running from his swollen lip. |
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She told me to run a bath for her, about half full, then to come get her and help her into the tub. |
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She ran Mac a hot bath, she was beginning to think he would never stop shivering. |
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She undressed and ran a hot bath, careful to pour the right amount of bath beads into the whirlpool bath. |
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She ran herself a bath and lay in the tub just thinking about what she had said. |
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She dumped her bag on the floor and went into her bathroom, immediately running a bath. |
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She said today that residents had been told the service was going well and could even be extended to run later in the evenings. |
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She runs a center that provides counseling and training for young women from around Sierra Leone's capital, Freetown. |
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She got motivated to run for Congress when her ideas about education were ignored. |
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She added that Labour may run two candidates in East Limerick in the next elections. |
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She enjoyed cross-country runs, even with the cold wind making breathing difficult for her. |
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She walked for about a quarter of a mile and then suddenly broke into an oblique run up the soft part of the beach. |
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She changed her pace now to a run as the cry of a frightened horse broke the air. |
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She set out for her house at a run, and arrived there minutes later, gasping for air. |
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She stared at them for a minute before taking off at a run, sobbing as she ran. |
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She approached slowly at first, then broke into a run, her curiosity conquering her fear. |
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She is said to have had the run of Downing Street, until her exclusion in April. |
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She had never actually assembled the machine but there were four similar parts that she was dealing with. |
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She had helped him assemble a massive machine in their underground warehouse of a lab over the past six months, and finally it was ready. |
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She is assembling electrical components, placing round parts into small square boxes on her kitchen table. |
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She forcefully turned her face away and the two young men laughed out loud. |
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She had had to go run an errand for her mom out at the grocery store, while Richard had still been there, and he had said he'd come along. |
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She was running low on her supply of phenytoin and had developed a headache over the past two days. |
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She said that while overall she enjoys her job, she still runs across people who like to grumble or to ridicule her. |
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She told authorities she had been in love with her cousin and had planned to run away with him. |
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She put Hector through his paces in front of 220 pupils during the school assembly. |
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She suspected she might have twins because they run in both her and Stephen's families. |
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She keeps on telling me to get my thyroid checked, as these things run in families. |
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She reports that during the intervening period, she began to hear an uncomfortable noise, a loud ringing or buzzing. |
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She motioned for them to exit, but there were loud protests from the three girls. |
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She warned that food supplies would run out by the middle of the year unless further assistance was received. |
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She died of chest and abdominal injuries after she was run over by a lorry outside York District Hospital. |
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She is set to collect government pensions from two jobs, as an assemblywoman and as a department head at a county-run hospital. |
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She is the sort of person who, if you called her an unregenerate hippie, might proudly nod assent. |
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She cannot be made to forget him, even by the chief alien shouting at her very loudly. |
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She said the district valuer, a Government officer, had already assessed the trust's figures and was happy with them. |
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She began to speak the ancient runes that would enact the spell and was surprised to see the world around her lighten a few shades. |
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She will be a great asset to the team and we wish her every success in her new post. |
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She would be an enormous asset to this country and she is a very special case. |
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She smiled as she helped Justin up the high stool behind the metallic counter of the diner. |
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She was joined by Karen's Caper and the pair battled up the run-in before Maids Causeway got up by a short head. |
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She is eventually sacked after one of her secret assignations with him is discovered. |
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She was in a small, richly furnished room, lousy with velvet pillows in jewel tones, with deep gray draperies. |
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She said her husband, a rail clerk, went outside to confront the louts but they just taunted him and started smashing his car. |
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She and her friends strive to assimilate the vague information provided by their well-meaning but sinister guardians. |
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She claimed that loutish youths, prying locals and boorish day-trippers were making life intolerable. |
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She came back to Hampshire to live with her father, a lovable rogue who taught her how to get the things she wanted from life. |
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She did not overtly try to attract Edgar, but he was still falling in love with her. |
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She frequently accuses me of cheating on her, or falling in love with someone else. |
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She tours America and in the process of winning recognition she betrays her loves and her artistic beliefs. |
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She is fascinated with history and theatre, two loves passed down from her mother. |
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She loved gardening and flowers and spent many happy and contented days in the garden. |
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She fell madly in love with one of my great-great-uncles and they supposedly had a love affair. |
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She has had a passionate love affair with dance, so much so that it has become more than just a hobby. |
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She has also assisted at blood donor sessions in the town, and only stopped doing that in March. |
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She also very graciously assisted in the awards presentation that was done around the pool on the Saturday evening. |
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She has 14 dogs to look after, although she now receives some home assistance to help her out. |
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She kept his head above water and shouted for someone to come to her assistance. |
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She returned to the store and, with the help of a more sympathetic assistant, found a wig she liked. |
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She is also a part-qualified accountant and trained assistant care home manager. |
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She swapped track for road, became a marathon runner, ran three marathons and won the lot. |
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She suggests to Zoe that she does a runner before her trial, and despite initially laughing off the idea she begins to consider it as an option. |
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She describes her achievement as due to a phenomenal ability to plan, organize and manage a type of business which is traditionally run by men. |
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She managed the team from 1988 to 1995 and has been the Secretary of the club from day one. |
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She is now an assistant professor of creative nonfiction at the University of Alabama. |
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She has been reunited with the love child she gave away as a teenager, it emerged yesterday. |
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She is an assistant professor of European studies at Johns Hopkins University. |
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She was denied a teaching assistantship, although she was an experienced and excellent teacher. |
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She took her case to have the law clarified on assisted dying to the highest court in the land where a panel of five Law Lords give their ruling. |
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She began her career with the AIR and FM Radio, New Delhi, and has done the running commentary on the Republic Day parade. |
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She will lay an egg approximately every day or two until she has a clutch of about three to five eggs, which may or may not all hatch. |
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She also has some chocolate eggs ready for her family members, schoolmates and a neighbourhood friend she thinks will show up. |
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She sends her opponent from left to right on the baseline and wins a love game with a beautifully controlled drop shot. |
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She played the love interest and she does nothing more than bounce, jiggle and ooze vapidness. |
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She had been married to him when she was twelve or thereabouts, embarking on a life of poverty, drudgery and lovelessness. |
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She was never associated with skimpy bathing suits, low cut gowns and short dresses. |
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She realised that now, confronted with this vast expanse of lovely, beautiful space. |
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She explained that to achieve her associateship, she had to put together a presentation for a panel of judges. |
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She believes there must be some unscrupulous people using the association's name to get money. |
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She later considered getting a run-of-the-mill job working for a male boss in a big company. |
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She took a few steps away from the others and then started doing a few exercises to loosen up her cramped muscles. |
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She was chatty and engaged, loopily talking to the audience and occasionally to her toddler goddaughter who was in the front row. |
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She had been a periodic member of the ashram where I lived for 15 years before moving to Jerusalem and taking on the path of Judaism. |
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She was wearing loose trousers and a blouse that hugged her figure quite tightly, all her garments were black. |
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She selected the simplest of the gowns, a well-tailored dress of silver silk with a loose skirt and sleeves. |
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She turned to Jen, who had just put her cigarette out in the ashtray beside her. |
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She is considered a loose cannon by her crew, often unpredictable in a fight. |
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She then intends to write a book to tie up the loose ends and reveal what happens to her characters. |
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She hung the rucksack on her shoulder and walked slowly down the familiar paths she had passed before. |
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She found a small hollow, pulled out her sleeping bag, used the rucksack as a pillow and tried to get some sleep. |
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She followed Justin out to the kitchen and pulled a hot asiago bagel out of the oven. |
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She explains that in N. China the Beauty Heart radishes are treated as fruits, crisper than an Asian pear. |
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She shuffled tirelessly through essay after essay just to find one single piece of loose-leaf paper. |
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She had black hair and a ruddy face, and was humming merrily as she sliced bread at the table. |
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She was dressed in a normal housemaid's uniform, but her face was ruddy and she looked like she'd spent her entire life in the country. |
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She let herself fall into the embrace, tucking her wet face into his shoulder while her arms hung loosely over his back. |
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She shook her head, before reaching up and loosening her hair free of its holder. |
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She shook her head in acknowledgment, and went to Glory, loosening the tied reins. |
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She held on and he squeezed harder, until she gasped in pain and her fingers loosened. |
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She flirts shamelessly with the dashing danseur, who declines rather rudely to dance with her. |
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She lacks her gift for self-deprecating comedy and she needs to loosen up on screen but she has an engaging manner. |
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She felt herself unable to face the whispered asides and scornful remarks which would accompany her acceptance of any offer. |
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She took me aside and told me it was important that we stock his latest book prominantly in time for the holiday season. |
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She is declared the winner, but the rugged man next to her was a close second. |
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She was willing to do anything if she'd get some answers and he stopped asking all these questions. |
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She threatened that Queen Saraelye herself would come to fry them, and their asininity would justify it in their king's eyes. |
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She expressed admiration for his work, but rued her inability to understand his mathematics. |
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She gave her a rueful grin and hurried out the front door, nearly slamming into Kyle. |
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She exhaled, letting a bit of the tension flow out of her, and gave me a rueful grin. |
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She thought the dog had been dumped there and was asking around all week if anyone had lost a dog. |
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She asks why he never called her after their first date, and then asks him out again. |
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She could tell that he was ruffled, but he wasn't able to come up with anything to say until she was clearly out of his radius. |
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She appeared in a white suit jacket with an apricot blouse and a prim ruffle down the front. |
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She wore a flowing pale yellow skirt with ruffles and a silken blouse with puffed sleeves. |
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She quickly brings her arms stiffly to her sides and flashes a lopsided smile, her heavy jaw clenched. |
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She imagines his brown hair spiky and lopsided, like the last time she saw him. |
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She caught sight of the old tyre-swing hanging lopsided from an outstretched branch. |
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She had pizza bagels for lunch and fell asleep for a nap soon after we were done. |
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She rubbed his head till he fell asleep again, and she soon drifted off to sleep once more. |
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She is now deeply involved in study for AS levels and is contemplating a career as a meteorologist. |
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She searched his rugged features for any clue that he might be patronizing her, but all she saw was genuine interest. |
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She would not live this way, so history says she had an asp, which was an Egyptian cobra, brought to her hidden in a basket of figs. |
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She has the power to appoint a Lord High Commissioner to represent her and to give two speeches on her behalf at the General Assembly. |
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She is facing ruin after costs of tens of thousands of pounds were awarded against her. |
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She is scared of the ruinous power of the media, for visual signs carry much greater importance in the civilized world than words. |
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She was left with a dangerous house and the ruinous expense of making it habitable. |
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She does not look at people, she regards them, as though quizzing them at a ball through a pair of lorgnettes. |
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She knew letting the grief rule her would get her nowhere, but she didn't care. |
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She had a giant plastic ruler she would smack on the desk to quiet people in situations like that. |
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She would take out a ruler and measure exactly what I asked for, make a cut and show me what she had cut. |
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She lost her daughter and husband in an accident and at the time she was pregnant and miscarried. |
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She became convinced she was losing her baby and insisted her husband take her to hospital. |
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She did lose her third baby however, although I have no idea if this had any connection with smoking. |
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She was taken to hospital losing blood and was told by doctors she had been five months pregnant but had lost her baby. |
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She had tried other slimming classes but was unsuccessful as any weight she lost she put back on again quickly. |
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She laughed, her eyes weren't focused and she seemed to have lost her mind and gone insane. |
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She added that the town also lost out to places such as Moreton and Stow, which have more picturesque architecture and passing tourist traffic. |
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She is a stay-at-home mom of an Aspie teenage boy and a spirited preteen girl. |
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She fires off the cleanest and most articulated runs without a trace of strain or unwanted aspirates. |
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She works hard for the money, and she also has aspirations to move on up into management. |
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She left the store and headed over to the food court, her stomach rumbling. |
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She goes on to note that both English and Chinese make use of aspiration in their consonantal systems. |
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She heard in the distance the rumbling of thunder that drew closer by the minute. |
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She turned small issues into huge problems, spent hours ruminating about perceived inadequacies, and feared rejection. |
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She said there would have to be job losses, but no decision had yet been made from which areas of the trust. |
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She sniffed, and sighed from grief of her terrible loss of home and friends already. |
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She seems to be at a loss for things to do, like thousands of others of her ilk. |
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She died in a hail of bullets fired on Sunday by two assailants using assault rifles. |
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She picked it up with the cloth, saying she would take it to lost and found. |
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She was punished because her young brother was rumoured to have been seen in the company of a girl from a rival tribe. |
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She knew now he was not sleeping, and had been murdered by the assassins who lay dead on her floor. |
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She knows she still has a lot to learn, but she clearly understands now what dancing is all about. |
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She had stabbed a woman to death and had also been arrested for assault with a deadly weapon, assault and battery, and firearms possession. |
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She gets very hot and grumpy, sweats lots, dehydrates and needs to be fed more, etc. |
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She often felt like she had been punished for a reason and that punishment was her lot in life. |
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She worked full time as a weaver to put food on the table and cared for three of us without lamenting her lot. |
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She sighed as, at long last, she fell into her bed, not even noticing the fact that the sheets were rumpled. |
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She got up, not answering, brushing her blouse and smoothing out the slightly rumpled skirt. |
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She yearned intensely to throw in her lot with us for life and yet she was inhibited by subconscious fear. |
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She struggled to keep herself quiet as she took in breath after breath of air. |
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She burst through the top of the water and gasped loudly for breath, her lungs and face stinging from the cold. |
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She took a few moments to gather enough breath to get anything audible out. |
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She drew deep breaths and concentrated all of her attention on putting one foot in front of another. |
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She forced herself to take a few deep breaths to calm her racing heart and clear her mind. |
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She had to breathe a couple of deep breaths before she could allow herself to talk about her mom. |
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She took several deep breaths and tried to settle the uneasiness in her chest. |
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She hastened her steps, for the wind was a breath of chilling air and she was anxious to get home and off of her tired feet. |
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She poured some into the cap, cupping it into her hands and inhaling its warmth as if it were the breath of life. |
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She hadn't done it in such a long time and she was longing for it as though it was the breath of life. |
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She stared at the empty glass for a moment, and then swore quietly under her breath. |
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She had remarkably soft skin, he noticed, and wondered what type of lotion she used. |
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She swore softly under her breath as she began to push her way through the crowd. |
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She didn't bother wasting her breath on droning polite words to sound sophisticated. |
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She ran down the street shouting for help after her son Jordan stopped breathing and turned blue. |
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She got to the bottom of the stairs and ran out the front door of the building. |
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She sighed and scratched her head, running her fingers through her disheveled hair. |
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She rose from the bench, smoothing her skirts quickly and running her hand over her hair. |
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She broke off her verbal assault because John had started to laugh. |
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She swung up into the saddle, and nudged the chestnut into a fast lope. |
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She moved at a full run or lope, and lay down a lot in between. |
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She seeks revenge upon the other assassins with whom she worked. |
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She became a globalist early on in her life, a moment that is crystallized in the incredible anecdote that begins her book. |
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She is not too hot or too cold, but just right, the goldilocks of Fed chairs. |
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She seemed too immersed in a phone call to actually notice Kat's sudden appearance, so, with caution and much aching, Kat limped lopsidedly down the fluorescently lit hallway. |
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She chooses to improvise, to break rules, to find loopholes. |
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I guess it begins with Shakespeare, but it includes She Stoops to Conquer by goldsmith. |
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She had disappeared while out running an errand for her mother. |
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She has to be one of the most annoying characters I've ever run across. |
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She took her usual visual inventory of him, noticing his big rough hands and ruggedly handsome features but did not get past his eyes which held her own until she looked away. |
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She has run away from five years of abuse and domestic violence. |
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She has appeared on The View and good morning America and was featured in a two-page spread in Vanity Fair. |
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She really struggled and fought hard and gloriously, always for us all around. |
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She must have walked for an hour or two, heading nowhere in particular, when she felt a weird, sudden urge to go to the Shambles, a local ruined building, with no roof. |
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She finally ran the professor down in an academic directory. |
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She heard footsteps coming towards her and she turned and ran to her room. |
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She was employed as a cook some years ago, but now she rules the roost. |
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She spent eight years running a drugs programme in Oldham in Manchester. |
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She said the ride was stopped but no one came to their assistance. |
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She sank to the floor, watching as the green turned an ashy gray. |
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She did variations on third-series ashtanga until her belly was as big as a sack of groceries and she had modified her practice down to, like, two poses. |
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She will have to do cross-country runs and swim in the outdoor pool. |
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She found him sitting in the lounge, staring moodily off into space. |
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She has since worked as associate producer and production assistant on numerous, and varied productions, including a 10-minute film for Flemish Government. |
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She was in and out in a few minutes, a bag of goopy trinkets under her arm. |
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She drew breath and poised herself between candor and discretion. |
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She had to first pass an entry test like all other aspirant lifesavers. |
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She had little doubt who would be causing such a ruckus at this hour. |
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She drew breath as easily as she once did, and she could talk. |
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She had never looked upon the ruddy face of Gryth's oldest son. |
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She was still breathing hard, but was beginning to get her breath back. |
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She paused to take breath for another sentence, but Will shook his head. |
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She was part of a loosely affiliated group of new landscape painters. |
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She slid back under the gate and took off at a run towards the big house. |
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She was tasked by Kofi Annan to be a United Nations Messenger of Peace, an appropriately meaningless, but distinguished, gong. |
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She mimicked the sound of rumbling traffic on a nearby highway. |
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She instantly felt guilty for the times she had been rude to him. |
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She smiled at him gently and he made a very rude gesture to her. |
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She wants to reform the stagnant economy, loosen union power and bring down taxes in a power-sharing Cabinet with the business-friendly FDP party. |
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She rummaged through her nightstand drawer until she found her journal. |
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She rummaged through her drawer and found the directions to Megan's house. |
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She rummaged around the cutlery drawer and came up with a ladle. |
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She looked at me as if I had lost my mind, then she looked out the window. |
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She looked through her documents and surfed the ASIO secured site. |
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She handed over her mobile and I rummaged the few digits from my memory. |
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She otherwise lived quietly with a golden retriever she named Lanie in honor of Sister Elaine. |
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She is an assistant professor of education at Pepperdine University. |
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She found out on her first day on the job in 1941, when confronted with two bodies laid out on gleaming white porcelain tables. |
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She seems to be rueing that choice, but we'll see how that turns out. |
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She highlighted very eloquently the pain and loss of personal grief. |
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She was then grabbed from behind and assaulted by a mystery assailant. |
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She wasn't saying much today, other than to ask after my wife and baby. |
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She asked me along to make sure he didn't try anything on, and I must have stayed in there for about four hours marvelling at this great wonder of the world. |
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She then completely surprised me by asking me out for a second date. |
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She says I have to call her as soon as Aaron asks me out on a real date. |
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She kissed him on the forehead and ruffled his already messy hair. |
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She ruffled his pale blonde hair, laughing when he jerked away. |
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She glided like a queen into the Whitney Gala on Monday night and watched as hot young things preened and posed in her gowns. |
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She was ruffled by the King's unchanging expression and tone of voice. |
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She never seemed fazed or perturbed by the goings-on and the very chaotic sleeping arrangements. |
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She was the British Ladies Rally Champion for three successive years, from 1976 to 1978 and continues to give the competition a run for their money. |
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She told Harry that she did not want to live in the goldfish bowl of Royal family life. |
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She came from a broken home and got into the misuse of drugs as a result of meeting an older man. |
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She had planned a party for herself at the Brunswick Green hotel to enjoy what should have been a milestone in her young life. |
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She makes me laugh by meowing at me loudly and sitting in the window as I drive to work and I give her a wave. |
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She is also often recognised from the award-winning ITV drama Band Of Gold, where she played brothel-keeper Anita Braithwaite. |
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She told us he required a bronchoscopy, when a camera is inserted to determine how far it the disease has spread. |
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She mentors incoming freshmen as a Senior Buddy and plays and tutors French horn and mellophone, playing in youth orchestra and Marching Band. |
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March 15th 1943 HE shuffled down the train as best as he could She said that she'd be there, she promised she would. |
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She has been likened to Katie, 25, who became one of the most controversial figures in the last series after her emotional meltdowns. |
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She suffered three broken ribs, a broken breast bone, a broken vertebra, a broken thumb and a collapsed lung in the explosion. |
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She is a perpetually single woman in her 30s who gorges on junk food. |
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She was pale and somnolent but able to be aroused despite slow mentation. |
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She wrote her master's thesis on solid rocket propellants during a 10-month research stay at the Mendeleev University of Chemical Technologies in Moscow, Russia. |
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She is considered by many as an incarnation of the powerful deity Kali and is revered until she menstruates, after which she must return to the family and a new one is chosen. |
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She prepares a light salad of salmon, avocado, watercress and pumpkin seeds, and a chicken shawarma with an array of spices, sauces and flatbreads. |
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She has a short-term memory span now measuring probably 20 to 30 seconds. |
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She further noted that little is known about the prevalence of menstrual cup use today, as most studies on this product were done in the 1960s and focused on acceptability. |
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She was a partridge and sharptail dog, and had never been on a duck hunt. |
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She and everybody else at this school would love to put Sam back, but then she'd be running afoul of the consumer products division of Warner Bros. |
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She was last seen wearing turquoise colored pants and a brown shirt. |
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She plays Annie Quaintain, who tries to rebuild her life in a wild shantytown after she's left penniless and opens a boarding house for labourers who are building an aquaduct. |
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