Ví dụ về việc sử dụng She was active trong Tiếng anh và bản dịch của chúng sang Tiếng việt
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She was active in Hadassah.
In the 1970s to the late 1990s, she was active as a singer and political activist.
She was active as a great poet for 30 years.
Later, on her return to Guinea-Bissau, she was active both in health and political matters.
She was active in the Anglican Church and its Mothers' Union.
The first woman tomake a formal speech in the Argentine Congress, she was active in intellectual property and consumer rights.
She was active in the early 19th century in the field of women's rights.
From 2006 to 2010 she belonged to the Alliance for the Future, since 2011 she represents Fuerza 2011.[1]Professionally she was active in the tourism sector.
She was active on her Twitter and Tumblr accounts as early as 2011.
Alcinda António deAbreu was born in 1953 in Mozambique.[1] She was active in the Mozambique Youth Association and served as its Deputy Secretary-General in the late 1970s and early 1980s.
She was active growing up as a member of a swim team and as a soccer player.
After literate Puerto Rican women gained the vote in 1929, Josefina Barceló de Romero worked on woman-to-womanvoter education efforts in San Juan, and she was active in the women's organization of the Liberal Party.
During the 1770s, she was active as an actress and director in Petit-Goave.
A trained teacher who asserted her position as an independent political activist and campaigner,Hayfron demonstrated this activism as early as 1962 when she was active in mobilising African women to challenge the Southern Rhodesian constitution.
At college, she was active in student government and planned a career in finance.
In 1979 she became the first Mosotho woman to be appointed an assessor on the High Court; she served on the council of the National University of Lesotho andon the government's National Planning Board. She was active on the Special Committee on the Status of Women on the Law Reform Commission.
Politically, meanwhile, she was active for many years in the Revolutionary Communist Party.
She was active in her family's pursuits- including serving as a sports team mom and school volunteer.
The victim of a brutal assault and rape, she was active in research concerning domestic violence in Botswana and a founder member of Women Against Rape(WAR) in Maun.
She was active in the Civil Rights movement, and worked with Martin Luther King, Jr. and Malcolm X.
While in France she was active with the Federation of Students of Black Africa in France(FEANF) before returning to Mali in 1965.[1].
She was active during the war, giving money to assist the Free French Forces and donating her yacht to the Royal Navy.
In 1985,when she was preparing her doctoral thesis in France, she was active in the Youth of Democratic Students, then joined the Organization for Freedom of Information and Expression(OLIE) and the Organization of the popular Democratic Action(OADP) which became, after merger with other formations of the left, the Unified Socialist Party.[6][7].
She was active on the internet, and also on the ground, updating Al Jazeera TV with the latest news related to the opposition.
She was active in the theatre as well as on British television, including a part in the noted series Brideshead Revisited, playing Brenda Champion.
She was active within the Maoist political organization, Bandera Roja(Red Flag), and helped found the Socorro Popular del Peru(Popular Succour).
She was active in Student Politics and served as the Social Affairs Secretary and Organization Secretary of the National Union of Students from 1969 to 1970.
She was active in campaigning for Women's Suffage, which was achieved in 1932(although women had already participated in some local elections in Uruguay).
She was active in painting, printmaking, and collage, and in 1991 the National Art Gallery in Caracas held an exhibition to review her work from 1941 to 1991.
She was active in the vehement and ultimately successful nationalist opposition to the Filos-Hines Agreement of 1947,[5][6] a military convention ratified by the Panamanian Minister of Foreign Affairs, Francisco Filos, and the Ambassador of the United States, General Frank T. Hines, both acting under the approval of their respective presidents: Enrique Adolfo Jimenez and Harry S. Truman.