Example sentences of "[adv] [conj] [pron] [is] at [art] " in BNC.
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1 | Its linear diameter is I 392 000 km ; it looks so small only because it is at a distance of nearly 150 million km from us . |
2 | I say this last , only because it is at the bottom of my mind , deep hid and permanent , not because it is least . |
3 | It is bad enough as it is at the moment . |
4 | You can not , for instance , turn someone into a surfing champion just because he 's at the seaside , but if it turns out that he has a genuine interest in fishing and some skills as a fisherman you can centre pictures and film on that . |
5 | It says there 's sandwiches on and it 's at the Oxford Arms so |
6 | On top of this a generous layer of washed pebbles or cobbles is placed and the pump outlet drawn up until it is at the surface of the stones . |
7 | Perhaps the most important question in the wake of IT Year must be : what will Kenneth Baker do now that he is at a loose end ? |
8 | ‘ He 's more likely to walk out when he 's at the top , not when he 's at the bottom . ’ |
9 | Anyone who decides to intervene in a family 's problems , even though it is at the family 's request , has a professional duty to be able to demonstrate the effectiveness ( or otherwise ) of the methods used . |
10 | This clerk is amorously alive and even experienced : — " " deerne love " " is as double in meaning here as it is at the beginning of Dame Sirith , and the same must hold for the semantically similar " " privee " " ; slyness is very much more the quality of a fabliau lover ( cf. |
11 | No shaved from there back and then as it is at the moment in the front . |
12 | Challenge it and challenge it again until it 's at a bare minimum . |
13 | Some psycholinguistic models ( e.g. Cole & Jakimik 1980 ) assume that the beginning of a word is known , either because it is at the beginning of the utterance or because the previous word has been identified . |