Example sentences of "[noun] [verb] i at [art] [noun] " in BNC.
Next pageNo | Sentence |
---|---|
1 | Ken met me at the entrance and guided me into a side room . |
2 | One of the lads asked me at a dance how I had earned my living before I had got married . |
3 | Dorje greeted me at the bottom and pulled me by the hand across the slabs of ice which had cracked into pontoons , barely locked together . |
4 | Rich and Syb met me at the station . |
5 | He figured it was worth a nickel to call me at the Globe , and he 's not a wasteful man . ’ |
6 | But another sister followed me at the Dowsons when I left to get married . |
7 | The tailor measured me at the height of the deluge . |
8 | The effect on listed adjoining properties , Donithorn , Riley House and er , the other one , the name escapes me at the moment , erm , and that it will give insufficient curbage to Riley House when er , whatever development takes place there . |
9 | On making a very despondent journey home my wife greeted me at the door with the astounding statement that the property had been found and handed into a branch of a building society and the member of the staff had telephoned to inform my wife that it was there to collect . |
10 | Her warm and wide smile greeted me at the door and I forgot for a while the riddles and innuendos which surrounded Brian Harley and hid the killer of Froggy Davies . |
11 | ‘ Easy — a stroke of genius hit me at the height of the bombing , General . |
12 | Against the advice given me at the Centre , quite deliberately I decided to have neither a counsellor nor a healer . |
13 | ‘ No , his analyst told me at a party in New York . ’ |
14 | The auberge owner joined me at the door and stared with contempt at the sky . |
15 | Although my work as CBC Production Manager kept me at a desk rather than on the production floor , I was occasionally able to produce plays . |
16 | ‘ She was dynamic , had tremendous energy and was thoroughly decisive , ’ Bramall told me at the launch of a book , The Chiefs , which he has written with Gen Sir William Jackson . |
17 | The Champ greets me at the door to his mother 's house in Louisville . |
18 | Freya thanked me at the end of her letter for ‘ taking the time to care about a subject so little understood ’ , which was a sentence I heard often from girls in one way or another , in researching this book . |
19 | A sternfaced Sergeant meets me at the entrance to the big house . |
20 | ‘ What a thing to tell me at the start of a visit here ! ’ |
21 | I was still very pleased , however , when the statistician Ian Hodge told me at the end of the year that I had moved from being 156th in the world 100 metres ranking list in 1985 to 4th in 1986 ! |
22 | Taff joined me at the gun . |
23 | My first school expelled me at the end of second year . |
24 | Although these omissions suited me at the time , I have since found them incredible to the point of doubting my own powers of recollection , but when I checked recently with my sister , she confirmed their accuracy . |
25 | On the appointed Saturday in October , Micky met me at the railway station and drove me ( in a fairly elderly Morris Oxford with a canvas hood ) right down the High as far as the University Church , and there he parked ( no problem then ) . |
26 | Sundowner time found me at the Clachaig Inn ( JTR either went there or to the Temperance Hotel in Glencoe Village on the edge of Loch Leven ) after twenty-odd miles wandering and walking . |
27 | Bunny joined me at the bar and bought us both another drink . |
28 | After one interview in the relatively early days , my mentor , Ron Evans buttonholed me at the end of the programme . |