Example sentences of "[conj] [verb] at [art] [noun sg] [adv] " in BNC.
Next pageNo | Sentence |
---|---|
1 | He said , he 's not impressed , and er , I think the idea that go at a meeting today , |
2 | Consequently , in order to assert its prevalence , the Court of Chancery began to issue common injunctions which , although directed at the litigant personally rather than the common law courts , had the effect of limiting common law jurisdiction … |
3 | Prosecutions by local authorities under the Act of 1950 have little deterrent effect , because the increased sales are such that fines at the level presently authorised under the statute can be absorbed by large retailers as a relatively small increase in their costs , though the same is not true of small shops with their much lower sales . |
4 | He comes to the bar and sits at the table there by the tree . ’ |
5 | It was an inglorious episode in English history , little remembered since , and regarded at the time less as a disgrace than as a deliverance . |
6 | They held onto the rock and waved and shouted at the lighthouse as loud as they could . |
7 | But certainly he 'll be pushing and pushing at the front there and making runs to get in the back all night I 'm I 'm certain of that . |
8 | Which in turn brings us to the most remarkable fact of all , namely that so far from corroborating the police 's recent claims , the witnesses they located and interviewed at the time signally failed to mention any suspicious behaviour whatsoever . |
9 | There are two small patches to the north of the city and looking at the plan again this morning there 's one small patch |
10 | Instead , after a pause , and looking at the man quizzically , Ceauşescu remarked , ‘ Have it your way then ’ , and walked off . |
11 | Freedom is found by taking up our abode in the transcendent and looking at the world objectively . |
12 | Leaving aside such considerations as whether you would still be able to have your grandchildren to stay and looking at the matter strictly in financial terms , it is as well to realise from the outset that the cash difference on the exchange — in other words , your profit — will invariably be less than you expect . |
13 | ( a not unusual event ) he leaps up the six flights of stairs and arrives at the top as cool as a cucumber , followed by a very out-of-breath Orderly Officer . |
14 | Now , a slick and capacious catamaran leaves Singapore 's Finger Pier at 7.40 every morning and arrives at the island roughly four hours later . |
15 | Well I think I 'd better go and look at the jam again . |
16 | If … one prescient soul at your level , say , early in 1982 , … really had thought ministers should be forced to meet on this issue and they kept postponing discussions on the Falklands , could you as Permanent Secretary of Defence have ensured that relevant Cabinet ministers did get together and look at the problem rationally and seriously , in so far as it 's possible , in time ? |
17 | she said do you wan na come in and look at the kitchen now and I said no I wo n't stop now I 'll work |
18 | Four members of the sprint squad missed the bus and arrived at the stadium later than they should have for the morning heats . |
19 | Select a strong healthy stem that has borne a good bloom , or is still carrying one that has gone over the top , and look at the stem lower down — to see if you can find nice plump axillary buds or eyes in the leaf axils — these are latent growth buds , and they are going to become your new roses ! |
20 | To understand Homoeopathy we must consider a little more deeply and look at the situation afresh . |
21 | — If you ca n't answer these kinds of question , rewind and look at the section again . |
22 | A typical recent example was the production ‘ Care ’ written by Roy Mitchell and shown at the Theatre Upstairs in February , 1983 . |
23 | She slumped in the far corner of the white Corniche and watched her mother nervously hugging the steering wheel and peering at the road ahead . |
24 | As paragraph 16.1 of Code C makes clear , the police officer is obliged to charge a suspect as soon as he believes that there is sufficient evidence for a prosecution to succeed , but nobody could expect the police simply to cease work on the case and rely at the trial only on the material revealed up to the moment of charging . |
25 | Blake felt people gathering around him and staring at the warehouse now transformed into a burning pyre . |
26 | But he only said , ‘ Will you join with us ? ’ and looked at the Oak very straightly . |
27 | He picked up the glass case and looked at the bird reflectively . |
28 | He stopped walking and looked at the scrubland now directly in front of them . |
29 | 604 this court was faced with the curious situation that by a series of decisions , each moving almost imperceptibly further forward than the last , it had created a rule of law for which , if one stood back and looked at the matter afresh , there was absolutely no justification . |
30 | Philip came away from the door and looked at the paper too . |