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

  Next page
No Sentence
1 For steady-state operation at zero load torque the position of the rotor at the phase switching times is illustrated in Fig. 4.3 with reference to the torque/position characteristics of a three-phase motor operated with a one-phase-on excitation scheme .
2 In the mouth of the alley at the end of the tunnel two more shapes starting from the bridge into the darkness hesitated , and then stopped .
3 He struck a fine short iron over the bunker and right into the heart of the green at the 12th , and at last a putt found its mark from perhaps eight feet .
4 THERE was a small piece of spare ground on the other side of the hedge at the end of our garden , and on it , newly arrived , a caravan .
5 You can not work them single-handed since you can not see both sides of the hedge at the same time .
6 Here it is vital to complement the evangelistic enthusiasm with the gifts of pastor and teacher and to lay good foundations of a radical biblical understanding of the church at the same time as pressing on in evangelism .
7 In front of the church at the west end was built a portico or narthex which generally extended across the whole width of the façade .
8 The organisation of the Latin office of the Church at the Canonical Hours evolved from a complex tradition of teaching which found justification for these hours of prayer in both Old and New Testaments of the Bible ; and a general pattern emerged in which they were connected with the Passion narrative .
9 Would you personally be more motivated and work more effectively if you were to receive a share of the profit at the year end ?
10 Instead , they fell against some fifty concealed musketeers deployed behind the robust palisade of the settlement at the easiest point of access , the gate by the bridge over the stream .
11 so this memento of the artist at the height of his powers makes a welcome return to the catalogue , sounding finer still on CD .
12 The result is to make more plausible Mancini 's claim that from the seizure of the prince at the end of April some men were suspicious of Gloucester 's ultimate intentions .
13 The result is to make more plausible Mancini 's claim that from the seizure of the prince at the end of April some men were suspicious of Gloucester 's ultimate intentions .
14 The tale of the fall at the last fence by the VA can be told one day , but for now talk of fund-raising , sponsorship , sale of merchandise etc etc by keen , but necessarily overnight , groupings of enthusiasts will only serve to muddy the waters .
15 He notes that ‘ Another consequence of this development of bio-power was the growing importance assumed by the action of the norm at the expense of the juridical system of the law . ’
16 But , in proceedings of this nature the general rule is that , where a committal order has been made , any further application in respect of it should be made to the judge who made the order , whether that application is in the nature of an apology by the contemnor or an application to reopen the proceedings by reason of the availability of fresh evidence or some other ground where no error of the court at the hearing is alleged .
17 In announcing the decision of the court at the conclusion of the argument I stressed , and I repeat , that the effect of setting aside the order leaves the health authority and its medical staff free , subject to consent not being withdrawn , to treat J. in accordance with their best clinical judgment .
18 The question for the consideration of the court at the stage when the amount of contribution has to be assessed is how much , if anything , ought to be recoverable by the third defendant from the third party ‘ having regard to the extent of [ the third party 's ] responsibility for the damage in question . ’
19 The jealousy between them was the talk of the Court at the time .
20 A party who makes such an offer shall file a copy in a sealed envelope , but the offer shall not be brought to the attention of the court at the hearing until the question of costs falls to be decided and the court shall , in exercising its discretion as to costs , take into account any offer which has been brought to its attention : Provided that , except in a case to which paragraph ( 3 ) of the rule applies , the court shall not take such an offer into account if , at the time it is made , the party making it could have protected his position as to costs by means of a payment into court .
21 " Payment in " shall not be mentioned in the pleadings and the notice must not be with the pleadings or documents for the use of the court at the trial or arbitration until after its decision , except in the case of a defence of tender , or the filing of a plea under the Libel Acts ( Ord 11 , r 7 ) .
22 By the time of the next possible resolution of the problem at the end of 1921 , coalition had signally failed to provide Unionists with what they had hoped for , and Lloyd George had become an electoral albatross rather than an asset .
23 The scale of the problem at the Belfast Gas Works site on the Ormeau Road is daunting .
24 Such was the style of the Service at the time that it was known as " The Best Flying Club in the World " , but measured against today 's standards , utterly amateurish and grossly incompetent .
25 4 October : The Princess Margaret , Countess of Snowdon , President of the Girl Guides Association , attended a Meeting of the Executive Committee of the Council at the New Cavendish Club , Cumberland Place , this afternoon .
26 Sir Denis Rooke , Chairman of the British Gas Corporation , became Chairman of the Council at the end of 1977 , with its student numbers still rising by anything from 6 to 13 per cent a year .
27 Labour has vowed to keep the Works open if it wins control of the Council at the next election .
28 Another who seems to have greatly appreciated his visit to Scotland was the Spanish ambassador Don Pedro d'Ayala , who wrote an account of the country at the desire of Ferdinand and Isabella in 1498 .
29 She 's out of the country at the moment so I 'm pretty stuck until she comes back .
30 1715 An Act against Brybrie. 1721 against giving anything to " Thiggers or Sorners. " 1725 against stealing horses or cattle ; transporting servants or any other persons to other countries , especially to Ireland ; weavers to " take the meall of the Country at the rate of the Country for their Work " ; that " shoemakers work the common whang at a shill .
  Next page