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Page "Little Women" ¶ 13
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She and composes
She composes herself enough to call Uncle Jed to accept the job with the 30-week show.
She composes herself and walks away.
She is a prolific composer, who composes many of the group's songs, and has been commissioned to create music for dance, choral, film, and stage productions.
She composes the music and makes it go faster and faster until Annabel agrees to tell her.
She composes and writes lyrics ( for herself as well as other singers in I've Sound ) for numerous other song collections.
She must wait until both halves of the message have been received to read it, and can only succeed in duping one of the parties if she composes a completely new message.
She composes for the Anne LeBaron Quintet, an ensemble comprising harp, trumpet, tuba, electric guitar, and percussion.

She and plays
She wrote gay plays about the girls for family entertainments, like `` Oh, What Fun!!
She called him `` Stuck-up -- that's why nobody plays with you, Mister Stuck-up ''.
She plays a central role in the first part of G. A. Henty's novel Beric the Briton and in a children's novel by Henry Treece.
She was introduced anonymously while still a teenager in the third book in the series and plays a larger role in several of the titles of the 1930s and 1940s.
She then plays a character named " Laliari " while wearing the name Jane Doe as an actress.
" She had been a model since she was sixteen and had acted in two failed plays.
She provides the only major element of Bring It On that plays as tweaking parody rather than slick, strident, body-slam churlishness.
She leans forward to restrain the Christ Child as he plays roughly with a lamb, the sign of his own impending sacrifice.
She plays Katherine Rhumor, a New York socialite who finds herself drawn into the central intrigue of a think tank, after the death of her husband.
She also read the plays of William Shakespeare, and novels by Charles Dickens and Sir Walter Scott.
She wrote fourteen plays, including " Fools Errand " which ran on Broadway in 1927.
She plays Sofia, the love interest of Eduardo Noriega's lead character.
She plays poker each week with them and also runs the onboard theatre troupe, being a skilled actress and director.
She went on to star in several other plays in Washington.
She plays a major part in various adventures of Jason's crew, suffered injury in a battle at Colchis, and was healed by Medea.
She plays a woman raped, along with her sister, by a ruthless gang at a fairground and seeks revenge for her sister's now vegetative state by systematically murdering her rapists.
She plays hopscotch in the Villa and sees the patient as a noble hero who is suffering.
She discovers his name is Nino Quincampoix, and she plays a cat and mouse game with him around Paris before eventually anonymously returning his treasured album.
She plays beautiful, sensitive, deep parts with a little bit of intelligence behind them.
She also began to participate in amateur plays and musicals, starting in 1780, in a theatre built for her and other courtiers who wished to indulge in the delights of acting and singing.
She has also published two plays but has not yet translated either.
She also plays the ukulele.
She also cites verbal similarities between both Shrew plays and the anonymous play A Knack to Know a Knave ( c1592 ), which was first performed at The Rose on 10 June 1592.
She is mentioned briefly in The Lord of the Rings, and plays a supporting role in The Silmarillion.

She and for
She said, `` I guess the Lord looks out for fools, drunkards, and innocents ''.
She studied it for a long time.
She seemed to have come such a long distance -- too far for her destination which had wilfully been swallowed up in the greedy gloom of the trees.
She could not scream, for even if a sound could take shape within her parched mouth, who would hear, who would listen??
She was glad, completely and unselfishly glad, to see that things were working out the right way for both Sally and Dan.
She was telling herself that this might just be her reward at the end of a long meaningful search for truth.
She set the dipper on the edge of the deck, leaving it for him to stretch after it while she looked on scornfully.
She said, with the solicitude of a middle-aged woman for her only child.
She has rarely been photographed with him and, except for Carl's seventy-fifth anniversary celebration in Chicago in 1953, she has not attended the dozens of banquets, functions, public appearances, and dinners honoring him -- all of this upon her insistence.
She was pious, too, once kneeling through the night from Holy Thursday to Good Friday, despite the protest of the nuns that this was too much for a young girl.
She knelt out of reverence for having read the Meditations of St. Augustine.
She left the next day for her teaching job at Princeton, Illinois.
She ended her letter with the assurance that she considered his friendship for her daughter and herself to be an honor, from which she could not part `` without still more pain ''.
She had her reasons for this.
She had been picked up by the Russians, questioned in connection with some pamphlets, sentenced to life imprisonment for espionage.
She gave me the names of some people who would surely help pay for the flowers and might even march up to the monument with me.
She had done it last year, and the year before, and the year before that, and she, and her people were dependent upon these cans for food.
She should offer substitutes for the temptations which seem overwhelmingly desirable to the child.
She was the only kind of Negro Laura Andrus would want around: independent, unservile, probably charging double what ordinary maids did for housework -- and doubly efficient.
She was taken up in worry for the reckless old man.
She had taken him out of the schoolhouse and closed the school for the summer, after she saw Miss Snow crack Joel across the face with a ruler for letting a snake loose in the schoolroom.
She lay under the covers making jabbing motions with her forefinger telling me where to look for the coffeepot.
She wrote again and now, abandoning for the moment the theme of love, she asked for help in the matter of her career.

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