A Co Offaly woman has denied at the Central Criminal Court that she willingly had sex with her uncle when she was 17 years old.
The woman, now 29, who was giving evidence in the trial of an Offaly farmer charged with raping and sexually assaulting her over an eight-year period, also said she had not made a decision yet about suing him.
The 54-year-old man has pleaded not guilty to 44 charges alleging offences in Offaly on dates from 1990 to 1998.
He denies 27 counts of rape: one in 1992; seven in 1993; 10 in 1994; and three each in 1995, 1996 and 1997-1998. He also denies 17 counts of indecent and sexual assaults on dates from 1990 to 1995.
The complainant told prosecuting counsel, Niall Durnin SC, her uncle once raped her in a milking parlour and regularly raped and sexually assaulted her when she was babysitting his children while his wife was away at family weddings in the US.
She said there were also occasions when the accused raped and sexually assaulted her while his wife was in the house and she was sharing their daughter's bedroom. She said she would try to push him away but did not scream out because the other girl was sometimes still in the room.
The woman did not accept in cross-examination by defence counsel, Patrick Gageby SC, that she bought her uncle a present of pornography and that on one visit to her family home she jumped up on him and threw her legs astride his waist.
She denied saying anything "uncouth or sexual" to her uncle. She did not accept that she willingly came to the accused's bedroom in 1995. She said she never approached him or "came on to him" in any way.
She replied "No, what I am saying is true", when Mr Gageby said the accused admitted slapping her on the bottom but "that there was never any rape as you have described".
She accepted there was a solicitor in court from a firm that has helped victims of sexual assault claim compensation from transgressors, but did not admit that it was her intention to sue her uncle.
When Mr Gageby told her there was no stamp on the accused's wife's passport for travelling to the US in 1994 as she had claimed, the woman said his wife must have been on holidays.
The hearing continues before Mr Justice Peter Charleton.