Help


[permalink] [id link]
+
Page "Mercedes de Acosta" ¶ 15
from Wikipedia
Edit
Promote Demote Fragment Fix

Some Related Sentences

She and was
She was amazingly light, and so relaxed in his arms that he wasn't even sure she was conscious.
She was carrying a quirt, and she started to raise it, then let it fall again and dangle from her wrist.
She glanced around the clearing, taking in the wagon and the load of supplies and trappings scattered over the ground, the two kids, the whiteface bull that was chewing its cud just within the far reaches of the firelight.
She said, and her tone had softened until it was almost friendly.
She had picked up the quirt and was twirling it around her wrist and smiling at him.
She was quick.
She brought up her free hand to hit him, but this time he was quicker.
She regarded them as signs that she was nearing the glen she sought, and she was glad to at last be doing something positive in her unenunciated, undefined struggle with the mountain and its darkling inhabitants.
She was sure she would reach the pool by climbing, and she clung to that belief despite the increasing number of obstacles.
She was bewildered.
She was standing in a thick grove.
She already knew this unwholesome, chilling atmosphere that was somehow grotesquely alive.
She was glad, completely and unselfishly glad, to see that things were working out the right way for both Sally and Dan.
She was still hugging the stained coat around her, so I said, `` Relax, let me take your things.
She was wearing nothing beneath the coat.
She was standing with her back to the glass door.
She was just not able to break the spell.
She was telling herself that this might just be her reward at the end of a long meaningful search for truth.
Meredith was irritated when the Grafin knocked at his door and told him, `` She is a great beauty!!
She confessed she was unhappy, he asked was it her husband??
She began to explain, `` There was this poet, in Italy '' He interrupted, `` Please don't judge all poets ''.
She was like charcoal, he thought -- dark, opaque, explosive.

She and argues
She argues that the convergence of sexism and racism during slavery contributed to black women having the lowest status and worst conditions of any group in American society.
She argues that slavery allowed white society to stereotype white women as the pure goddess virgin and move black women to the seductive whore stereotype formerly placed on all women.
She argues that in order for women to be equally represented in the workplace, women must be portrayed as men are: as lacking sexual objectification.
She argues that Bacon's movement for the advancement of learning was closely connected with the German Rosicrucian movement, while Bacon's New Atlantis portrays a land ruled by Rosicrucians.
She argues that the legacy of Christian misogyny was consolidated by the so-called " Fathers " of the Church, like Tertullian, who thought a woman was not only " the gateway of the devil " but also " a temple built over a sewer.
She argues that they undertook their research using a novel and previously untested methodology in order to confirm a predetermined theory about the age of these structures.
She argues that symbolic work with these personal symbols or core images can be as useful as working with dream symbols in psychoanalysis or counseling.
She argues that subversion occurs through the enactment of an identity that is repeated in directions that go back and forth which then results in the displacement of the original goals of dominant forms of power.
She argues " The provision on the establishment of “ secure and recognized boundaries ” would have been meaningless if there had been an obligation to withdraw from all the territories.
She argues that a stage direction in A Shrew seems to indicate a part to be played by the minor actor Simon Jewell, who died in August 1592.
She argues that if Knack borrows from both The Shrew and A Shrew, it means The Shrew must have been on stage by mid-June 1592 at the latest, and again suggests a date of composition of somewhere in late 1591 / early 1592.
She argues unflinchingly with Creon about the morality of the edict and the morality of her actions.
She argues that anger originates at age 18 months to 3 years to provide the motivation and energy for the individuation developmental stage whereby a child begins to separate from their carers and assert their differences.
She argues against the institution of slavery yet, at least initially, feels repulsed by the slaves as individuals.
She argues that the church is not an example of Jean Baudrillard's concept of hyperreality, arguing that " they create, rather than consume, popular culture in the practice of their spirituality ".
She argues that the youths ' agreement on the way the night's events unfolded proves that things occurred just as they say.
She argues with Destiny, declaring there is more to existence than what is in his book.
She argues that their intellectual debts to Locke are most evident when one looks at the 1865 debates in the Province of Canada ’ s legislature on whether or not union with the other British North American colonies would be desirable.
She argues that the later evidence suggests that:
She argues that wit is natural, whereas learning is artificial, and that, in her time, men have more opportunity to educate themselves than women do.
She argues that organizations and political bodies in the Mideast like Hamas and Hezbollah " have a greater interest in maintaining a state of hostility with Israel than in improving the lives of the people they claim to represent ".
She also argues that Eliade's theories have been able to accommodate " new data to which Eliade did not have access ".
She also argues that this is actually changing the nature of Fa ' afafines itself, and making it more ' homosexual.
" She argues that Dissenters deserve the same rights as any other men: " We claim it as men, we claim it as citizens, we claim it as good subjects.
She argues that Arthur was betrothed to Catherine of Aragon from the age of two: if he had been weak and sickly it would have been reported to Isabel of Castile and Ferdinand of Aragon, Catherine's parents.

0.154 seconds.