Example sentences of "and [verb] [adv] at [art] " in BNC.

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1 He went back , took a hoe from inside the door of his house and stabbed furiously at the cabbage patch , trying to rearrange the furrows in neat order .
2 " Sit here , near me , and let's be cosy … oh , well , perhaps just a touch , " she turned her eyes away from the bottle and gazed absently at the passing crowd until her glass was quite full .
3 He stopped , confused , by the bus stop opposite the Protestant Truth Society , and gazed unseeingly at the list of routes .
4 He puffed furiously on his pipe and gazed dreamily at the ceiling .
5 A man climbed to the top and gazed helplessly at the curved expanse of the copper-sheathed dome .
6 The Bishop sighed and gazed wearily at the opposite wall .
7 With some deliberation , he withdrew his arms from under the bedclothes and gazed tiredly at the backs of his hands .
8 Katherine lay on the bed which had become hers and gazed blankly at the ceiling .
9 He took another sip of whisky and gazed thoughtfully at the ceiling .
10 In reality , individuals may not be able to borrow and lend freely at a given interest rate .
11 Wholesome cooking used to mean a whole lot of work … not least of it , reaching up to the grill , and scrubbing away at the oven and hotplate .
12 With its twin staircases and end steps , a Dreadnought was capable of loading and unloading simultaneously at a terminus .
13 Of course she could , she told herself , clenching her fists and gazing unseeingly at the distant mountain-tops .
14 I was standing motionless by the desk , and gazing vacantly at the letter , when I heard some footsteps outside the door .
15 Foinavon had been trained by Tom Dreaper in Ireland for Arkle 's owner Anne , Duchess of Westminster , but while in Dreaper 's charge had been notable mainly for his extraordinarily laid-back demeanour : in a chase at Baldoyle he was in the lead when falling at the third fence , throwing Pat Taaffe well clear , but Foinavon did not bother to scramble to his feet , preferring to remain on the ground and pick quietly at the grass beside him .
16 He nodded , then turned and rode away at a canter .
17 The dawg will diverge from the node at the end of the head string , and converge again at the first node of the tail string .
18 They righted the boat , however , and got away at the second attempt .
19 I quickly learned that pointing the camera and flash straight at the glass of the aquarium did not work .
20 He stood at the urinal and peed fiercely at the white ceramic wall , streaked with rusty tear-stains from the corroding pipes .
21 Bob tips in a portion of hops at the start of the boil and adds more at the end for aroma .
22 We could have come over to Bruges in the evening and dined together at the Duc de Bourgogne . ’
23 as if on cue , they heard footsteps on the back stairs at that moment , and Tom himself entered the kitchen after crossing the back porch and knocking briefly at the door .
24 He was clean-shaven , in the Norman manner , leaving open to view a face broad at brow and well provided with strong and shapely bone , a lean jaw , and a full , firm mouth , long-lipped and mobile , and quirking upward at the corners to match a certain incalculable spark in his eye .
25 An editorial in The Lancet ( November 10 , 1990 ) entitled ‘ Who 's for tennis ? ’ but which could have just as easily been entitled ‘ Who 's for running ? ’ sums up the present state of the art and looks particularly at a new piece of research carried out on civil servants .
26 BLUE PLANET 's sensational photography explores continents and oceans , and looks too at the forces that influence our environment : storms , volcanoes , earthquakes , typhoons and , perhaps the most powerful of all , Mankind .
27 With mounting excitement which neither betrayed they moved over to the desk and peered intently at the blotter .
28 He put on his glasses , walked over to the windows , and peered closely at the titles of the books .
29 One or two of the braver spirits moved closer to the road and peered across at the grass .
30 The latter 's delight and enthusiasm were such that he insisted that Nicholas should be sent to study at Oxford University and maintained there at the royal charge ; but a month later the youth died , on his twentieth birthday .
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