Example sentences of "at [noun sg] " in BNC.

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1 If one looks at the figures presented at Budget time for the previous financial year , for the financial year 1967/1968 , it is pretty clear in broad terms on what scale the process had been in operation .
2 He described them as ‘ associates ’ and tried to visit every store at least once a year ( always staying at budget motels ) .
3 Lombard 's Pictures may lack the last degree of individual characterisation , but at budget price this version can be given a warm welcome .
4 Now EMI is making the whole series available to the UK and at budget price ( ie. two CDs for the price of one full-price CD ! ) : a very shrewd decision .
5 Also , they insisted that ‘ Sandinista ’ and ‘ London Calling ’ were issued at budget price , meaning they did n't make any money out of them .
6 Lamont hints at Budget tax gloom for all
7 The larger holiday parks may have entertainment centres with pools , ballrooms and restaurants and offer the features and entertainment found in big hotels — but at budget prices .
8 We looked at a couple of classy UPSs at budget prices : the AccuCard and the Ondyne Expert .
9 Even at budget price , the 65% it scored an Issue 67 seems excessively generous .
10 You may have seen it all before , but there 's always room for a game of this quality , especially at budget prices .
11 In contrast , direct taxes can only be changed at Budget time .
12 Every other committee , or part of this county council has , with the exception of probation service which we did today , social services and libraries which we did at budget revue , have been funded at last year 's cash limit plus one and a half percent .
13 And I take this opportunity to say that , erm , I had , I moved this at budget revue , and my intention was to move erm , pretty much the wording that Mr moved at property , but I was unable to obtain that wording by the time of the meeting , so I put this forward , erm , knowing that it obviously was different words , but but with that same sense , that we do have to address some very real issues about County Farms and not to pussyfoot about it I think that er , any comparison between the County Farms and a commercial enterprise is a coincidence of terms , but I ca n't see how we can have forty million pounds worth of estate , as it 's valued on the free market , to be making two hundred and ninety-one thousand pounds a year out of it , and think that that is commercial .
14 I , I , that , that is the answer 's in the negative , we 're not setting up those posts or funding them today , but they 've enabled us , they 've prompted us to carry out a revue , I think , I was n't present at budget review it .
15 And it was the reasoning behind the erm , the resolution at budget review .
16 STRATHCLYDE councillors yesterday ran the gauntlet of 3,000 angry local government workers protesting at budget cuts and the stalemate in a three-month-long pay dispute in the region 's finance department .
17 But when we talked about ‘ The House ’ — that was what we called it , there was never a name — we could imagine that just at the top of the stairs would be the Great Kitchen with its rows of gleaming copper pans hung up next to pheasants and hams and bunches of strange herbs — and through the kitchen window we 'd be able to see the long lawns of the garden where stone lions crouched with their heads between their paws and real peacocks screeched up at peacock shapes clipped out of hedges …
18 Photography JULIAN BROAD assisted by Nick Selby/Fashion KARL & DERICK ( UTO ) /Hair Colin Roy at Vidal Sassoon/Make-up Jo Karsberg at Debbie Walters/Models Karl at Storm , Lisa Roudette at Models One and Josefin at Premier
19 There are three strategic business objectives encouraging senior management to look closely at DIP : profitability ; customer service ; and quality management .
20 Turn right along road for 500 yds. 4 At dip in road turn right alongside footpath to Thorpeness .
21 All the stories in the book were centred on people : ‘ Mrs Nussey and the Pawnbroker ’ ; ‘ Jem Larkin and the Pools Win ’ ; ‘ Peter Fairclough at Closing-Time ’ .
22 When I 'd finished , I did n't look at Mum and Dad , I just stared at the carpet .
23 I looked at Mum : what in hell 's name could she say next ?
24 Please — ’ And she looked imploringly at Mum .
25 I looked at Mum and thought if only she was as nice as she looked maybe all our lives would have been better .
26 Mary glared at Mum who was pretending not to listen .
27 Dad scowled at Mum when one of the removal men said to him , ‘ Yow 've got a right one theea mate .
28 NANNY ‘ THREW BABY AT MUM
29 Then she 'd start on at Mum , ‘ When can I go to Rainbows ?
30 Then John looked at Mum .
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