Example sentences of "be [adv prt] at the " in BNC.

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1 A complementary exhibition that will bring Cezanne and Pissarro together should be on at the Musée d'Orsay in Paris at the same time as the Rishel/Cachin retrospective .
2 So I hope hopefully this evening will be a very constructive meeting and we 'll certainly welcome your views about what you feel should be happening to the theatre or should be taken or should be taken place at the theatre , what should be on at the theatre , and er things that you feel that are n't happening at the moment .
3 General Pershing is the one to be on at the big race .
4 ‘ If any other part of the machine broke the farmer would be down at the dealer causing a song and dance .
5 IF THE truth be known , Ian Woosnam would probably just as soon be down at the Golden Lion in Oswestry tomorrow night , having a pint or two with the lads .
6 If I 'm not here , I 'll probably be down at the boatyard .
7 His inclination was to be down at the yard .
8 ‘ I shall want to be down at the track early tomorrow morning .
9 They had an interest in playing golf together so specifically formed a society giving it the name of the road they happened to be in at the time — Worple Way , Harrow .
10 There was some confusion as to who was to be left behind , as ever all wanting to be in at the action , the Steward and Moray flatly refusing to stay .
11 Trailing some way behind the braver riders , I did n't even get to see a fox , let alone be in at the kill .
12 This bereaved pensioner was glad to be in at the present death .
13 ‘ Should n't you be in at the feast ? ’
14 On one of our south coast patrols I managed to be in at the kill on what turned out to be one of our more amusing combined operations .
15 It expects to be in at the finish .
16 ‘ Then you 'll be in at the start , with the broken nights and the four-hour feeds and the nappies which need to be constantly changed . ’
17 These days , it always seems to be in at the deep end for Foreign Secretary , Douglas Hurd .
18 Then he had added , ‘ I 'll be over at the factory if you need me before then .
19 I 'll be over at the Gloucester Docks to do my bit …
20 The padlocks would be off at the main entrance by now , for the late-morning mail and for bar deliveries .
21 and my , my , me and my brother are gon na be off at the same time
22 And you had to walk home , go to bed , and set your alarm , and you had to be up at the court at 10 a.m .
23 ‘ No doubt Emily will be up at the crack of dawn , all geared up and ready to go .
24 GOSPEL singer Michael Card will play the Assembly Hall in Belfast tonight — and still be up at the crack of dawn tomorrow to dash up the Antrim Coast for the North West 200 .
25 John and Muriella , who was an excellent archer , were eager to be out at the butts .
26 Exceed/NT will be out at the end of the month at $600 .
27 As far as the PowerPC RISC is concerned , IBM says the 603 — for notebooks and entry-level desktops — the 604 — for mid-range and multiprocessing desktops — and the 64-bit 620 multiprocessing part , designed for commercial systems , will be out at the end of next year or beginning of 1995 .
28 ‘ He 'll be out at the Rotary Club dinner .
29 ‘ Another half hour should see this job finished ; we should be back at the FRG asleep by first light .
30 They had hoped to be back at the beginning of next season but it now looks unlikely to be until half-way through it .
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