SHE LAUGHED EXTREMELY HARD

SHE IS BEING BLIND NOW

SHE IS SHUT-EYED

SHE HASN'T LOOKED TO SEE WHERE YOU ARE

SHE SIPS SOMETHING SWEET OUT OF A BRIGHT CAN

or: "She drank her wine with small ladylike sips" (from the Oxford Advanced Learner's Dictionary, Oxford University Press 1989 @ ladylike: second example sentence p. 697)

SHE CLIMBS

SHE IS AS OLD AS YOUR MOTHER

SHE IS TOO BIG AND TOO WHITE

 

SHE STANDS AT THE START OF THE BOARD

SHE PAUSES FOR JUST THAT BEAT OF A PAUSE

SHE DISAPPEARS IN A DARK BLINK

SHE WAS PART OF A RHYTHM THAT EXCLUDES THINKING

SHE WOULD LOOK UP

SHE SAYS

SHE SWEARS SHE'LL BE THERE

SHE CLEANS UP HER PLACE FOR HIM TO STAY THERE 

SHE'S A FOOL

SHE'D A KID BUT WASN'T ALL BLOWN OUT AND VEINY AND SAGGED

SHE WAS NOT THE PART OF THE PROBLEM I COULD, YOU KNOW, ADDRESS

The lines are some of the main sentences having 'she' as a subject that I found in Brief Interviews With Hideous Men (Back Bay 2000) by DAVID FOSTER WALLACE.

Tools for practice: