Example sentences of "[pron] [verb] at the [noun sg] in " in BNC.
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1 | I arrived at the station in good time and chained my travel-bag to the luggage rack . |
2 | I arrived at the station in good time for the train but I did n't have to wait more than three or four minutes and I was in London at ten to eleven . |
3 | I arrived at the House in time to be greeted by the sight of Alan Clark , the maverick right wing MP for Plymouth Sutton , rushing out of Westminster Hall shouting at the top of his voice , ‘ She 's won , she 's won . ’ |
4 | Nor can I look at the way in which this view of faith and reason has influenced contemporary Christian thinking , both mainstream and among the evangelical or fundamentalist groups where it is most in evidence . |
5 | I looked at the bottle in the bag . |
6 | It 's added a certain anticipation as well to the placement job I 've been doing — ‘ Oh come on someone must have something to say ’ was a regular feeling/thought as I looked at the monitor in anticipation . |
7 | and er I looked at the advert in the paper and they go to er , where they make those , wines and |
8 | Greater Manchester West is my first choice , not Greater Manchester East , and when I looked at the vote in the last contest , back in nineteen eighty eight , when the erm then Alliance , or the ex-Alliance vote was split between the social erm liberal democrats as they were then , and the S D P , and saw the votes I had to beat this time , six thousand nine hundred , I thought I can look good next to that . |
9 | That 's what this programme is about , and in that time I mean I think , I was thinking actually as Terry was speaking , erm you said that it was not clear that you can judge somebody on a hundred days , and I must say I agree with that , and I think at the moment in the last hundred days we 've been at war and it 's impossible to judge a new Prime Minister , who 's come into office in the right at the beginning of what potentially could have been a very nasty war . |
10 | The next problem was how to deliver it , since I sat at the back in English ( our next lesson ) and Belinda sat at the front — which was how I knew that her hair touched her chair ! |
11 | LEFT : William Dick , who qualified at the College in 1817 and founded his own school in Edinburgh in 1823 . |
12 | Tim Roberts , prosecuting , said the couple , who lived at the house in Brankin Road , Darlington , had forgotten to shut the front door when they went to bed that night . |
13 | She trembled at the passion in his voice , her whole being coming alive just for him . |
14 | A Staffordshire University graduate is organising a reunion for ceramics students who studied at the centre in 1965 when it was North Staffordshire College of Technology . |
15 | The same kind of escape ( or enlargement , if you look at the process in a favourable light ) is allowed for in a discussion of half a century ago in which the thesis that all novels contributed to a sense of escape from the artificial complexities of civilisation was turned to a commercial purpose . |
16 | Classroom teachers who look at the lighting in their classroom may question whether they are able to do anything positive to help . |
17 | Since she was not particularly enamoured of Madame de Montijo it is little wonder that she arrived at the Cathedral in a state of high discontent . |
18 | Firemen who arrived at the house in Bath , Avon , after answering the hoax failed to revive him and he died in hospital . |
19 | Not much to choose either between Ards and Cliftonville who meet at the Oval in the other semi-final on Friday night . |
20 | She glanced at the tower in the shadow , and dismissed it . |
21 | She glanced at the paper in her hand . |
22 | You stare at the gear in the drawer , a glow in your belly spreading through you . |
23 | An inquest heard that a teenage neighbour , John Robson , who called at the house in Essex Close , Grangetown , Middlesbrough , was unable to get an reply . |
24 | First she called at the flat in the rue du Bateau and made a telephone call . |
25 | She stared at the warrior in front of her ; his helmet was intricately engraved , with sweeping lines and curves that reminded her briefly of Jake 's cup . |
26 | Idiotically she stared at the receiver in her hands and then dropped it back on its hook . |
27 | She looked at the look in his eyes and swung the belt like an axe . |
28 | She looked at the cauliflower in her hand . |
29 | ‘ You still maintain you are not the woman with whom Garry is having an affair ? ’ he asked , and she shivered at the threat in his quiet voice . |
30 | I have seen photographs of her ( looking it must be admitted not much younger than she did at the time in which this story is set ) , across which she has signed herself ‘ Mademoiselle ’ , and sometimes ‘ Miss ’ . |