Example sentences of "[verb] [adv prt] at [adv] " in BNC.
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1 | But even so there is a limit to the number of owls that can be packed into an area ; each pair probably insists on at least 20 hectares . |
2 | This led to the usual talk of dismissing coach Luis Gradin , the man in charge throughout this period of successive defeats , but he will stay on at least until the end of the year when the present Argentine RU committee changes . |
3 | You 're scheduled to go on at 10.30pm when coffee has been served . |
4 | Debbie sports a Medicine shirt , to remind us that the difficult West Coast noiseniks were once to play Rollercoaster , but would 've had to go on at about three in the afternoon to meet some venues ' childish curfews . |
5 | Go on , sit down at once ! ’ ’ |
6 | Under its headline ‘ Mercantile Tricycles Denounced ’ , the Graphic described how , in default of paying a 10 shillings fine plus costs , this cycling desperado was sentenced to seven days ' imprisonment — and what is more , poor Thomas Duff had been estimated by the police to have been rattling along at somewhere between 8 and 10 miles per hour . |
7 | Such schemes were an attempt to accommodate the desire of many older people to continue in at least part-time work and to find new ways of continuing the older tradition of gradual transition from full-time work to full retirement . |
8 | It is established that gastrin circulates in at least four bioactive forms , component I , gastrin ( G ) 34 , G17 , and G14 . |
9 | I have n't stayed in for about two months , about eight weeks , not one night , and he goes , ‘ I think you should stay in at least one ’ , and I goes , ‘ If you think I 'm staying in then you get lost , because I 'm not staying in this flaming house ’ , and he goes , ‘ You 're staying when I tell you to ’ , and I goes , ‘ I wo n't ’ , and I walked out and came back ten minutes later and said , ‘ I 'm going out , all right ? ’ and he goes , ‘ Okay ’ , and he give me some money to go out and come up here [ to the youth club ] . |
10 | As she gazed down at where his car waited in pole position , Celeste 's giggles had changed into a pout . |
11 | He was to sit in at least thirteen further Parliaments , six times for Guildford and five times for Surrey . |
12 | You 've got to agree in at least |
13 | Doctors from ethnic minorities predominate in at least two of our chosen specialties ( psychiatry and geriatric medicine ) — reflecting these specialties ' comparative unpopularity — and the proportion of such doctors is much greater in district general hospitals than in teaching hospitals . |
14 | An easement can come into existence by express grant or by contract , but it can also arise in at least three other ways . |
15 | Criticism of the empress has developed along at least three different lines . |
16 | Other symptoms were deemed to be present if they occurred on at least a quarter of the days or occasions , except that passage of mucus was taken as a symptom if it had ever occurred ( this being normal clinical practice ) . |
17 | It was a happy phrase which made people feel better , and it caught on at once ; and it has remained as a convenient label to cover the series of domestic reforms which the Roosevelt administration introduced between 1933 and 1938 . |
18 | As S. A. Pain put it , ‘ The idea caught on at once , the station was built , and received its famous name ’ . |
19 | A number of smaller PC makers have been forced to pass on at least some of that increase to their customers . |
20 | To my knowledge I know that it 's happening in at least half a dozen mines . |
21 | Thus , a cell resulting from the fusion of cells R and M is referred to as cell R + M. The advantage of this relatively simple system of nomenclature is evident in the so-called discal cell , a term used in at least four separate orders of insects with reference to a different cell in each case . |
22 | In the US , where the government is the only major backer , research has limped along at about half a million dollars a year . |
23 | Bordeaux is traditionally the arena for a thrilling mass sprint finish and on the long straight ride through the flatlands of Les Landes we may have the awesome sight of the whole peloton at full speed , driving along at up to 60 kilometres per hour , not in pursuit of a breakaway , but in anticipation of the finish . |
24 | He can claim , whether truthfully or not , that he had recommended clients to come in at exactly the right times . |
25 | It is expected to come in at around or below the price of SunSoft 's Solaris x86 desktop system which is £600 — $800 . |
26 | SCO wo n't price the thing until Tuesday , but its expected to come in at around or below the price of SunSoft 's Solaris x86 desktop system which is £600 — $800 . |
27 | Analysts are forecasting that Zeneca will make taxable profits of about £500 million in the current year , with ICI expected to come in at around £250 million . |
28 | Problems can arise when all the major bills seem to come in at once . |
29 | It has been known for caterers to come in at 8am , turn all the ovens on and not use them for three hours . ’ |
30 | Kylie Ann Minogue weighed in at just over 6lbs and was immediately established as the darling not only for the Minogues and their friends , but of mum Carol 's network of relatives who had emigrated with her from Wales to Australia . |