Example sentences of "[conj] [pron] [verb] [pron] at " in BNC.
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31 | Evidence is growing , however , that we have a need to express our grief and that we ignore it at our peril . |
32 | We may do it badly , but the beauty is that we do it at all . |
33 | Our horses had more sense and refused to go further so we stabled them at a local inn where we satisfied our hunger on a dish of fish cooked over charcoal before making our way up to the castle . |
34 | Of course er they have about erm well I 'm not sure , about twenty eight or thirty thousand gallons of diesel stocked up there , and of course in them buying it in bulk like that they get it at a cheaper rate . |
35 | When faced with that choice this summer , I chose to encourage people to continue to develop computerisation in primary health care rather than simply to reward directly those who did something very valuable — there is no doubt about that , or about the fact that they did it at their own risk — some years ago . |
36 | So terrified of doing the wrong thing that they do nothing at all — except bleat like sheep about their petty rules and regulations and their morality . |
37 | Moreover , such texts are the more dangerous in that they affect us at a subconscious level . |
38 | she goes to part-time so they get it at a reduced rate . |
39 | But although he aimed it at Nicholas , it fired into the air , for the boy knocked it sideways and held it . |
40 | I 've already revealed that I started out in a donkey jacket , but I should add that it took me at least ten years to get a decent kit . |
41 | In the absence of legal criteria that distinguish constitutional law from other laws , the definition becomes so broad that it defines nothing at all . |
42 | The terms of this argument repeat exactly those of the critical debate about univocal meaning , according to which the only alternative to the idea that history has a single meaning must be that it has none at all . |
43 | A quick glance at him showed her that he thought nothing at all of a drive like this , clinging to the mountainside and driving much too fast . |
44 | As Branson would have been the first to acknowledge , common sense dictated that he avoid it at all costs . |
45 | Her memoirs formed the inspiration for the film ‘ The King and I ’ , although Thomson 's portraits of the King show that he looked nothing at all like Yul Brynner . |
46 | It was not until he had accepted and had received travel instructions that he found himself at Bletchley Park as part of the Enigma team reading German cypher traffic . |
47 | The tired horse faced a journey of at least twenty miles across heavy country so he kept her at a sedate trot . |
48 | Her reaction to that had been swift but , so he persuaded himself at the time , perhaps rational . |
49 | Then , in 1964 he won the Masters again and everyone expected him at St Andrews for the Open Championship . |
50 | I went everywhere and no-one knew me at all . |
51 | ‘ I bought my first one in 1974 and I had it at least ten years . |
52 | I was half asleep when he showed us up to our rooms , Ward and I sharing one at the rear of the building , which , in place of beds , had a double-tier bunk in the corner . |
53 | Ludo and I hear it at the same moment . |
54 | The chamber had priestly vestments draped on dummies like olden days tailors might have used , and I identified it at once by the basin and marble slab in the corner . |
55 | And I saw none at Ballechin . |
56 | We were driving north and I saw it at once . |
57 | I had what I refer to as the Flower Gentleman come to call on me — I 'm terrible at remembering names — and I liked him at once . |
58 | and I want one at dinner time and one this afternoon . |
59 | So that 's se and I want you at the other end . |
60 | I began to think that I had found a friend , and I answered him at once . |