Example sentences of "[noun pl] [conj] [verb] [pron] at [art] " in BNC.
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1 | He stretched out his long legs and crossed them at the ankles . |
2 | Send us a cartoon or a caricature on the theme of 20th-century Oxford and we 'll publish the best two entries and display them at the Ashmolean . |
3 | Ian came with us part of the way , so we took two cars and left ours at the finishing point and Ian 's at the entrance to the track . |
4 | Josh Gifford wheeled Honey End round , took him back a few paces and put him at the fence a second time . |
5 | Some of them aid the deception by raising their tails and wagging them at the approaching attacker , while keeping the rest of the body still . |
6 | Harvey was there in a red-coat uniform , smiling and doing his neat little dances and pretending to drop plates and saving them at the last minute , and the girls were saying ‘ Ooo ’ and slyly studying each other 's hairdos and shoes . |
7 | In Chicago on June 17 she attacked those attempting " to create a new artificial state by taking powers away from national states and concentrating them at the centre " . |
8 | I know that in Beirut I simply took my child through the checkpoints and delivered her at the school gates . |
9 | Rip it into tiny pieces and throw it at the bride and groom at the next wedding you see . |
10 | Now this er of course was railway waggons and er when you started work you was put with a skilled man and i er it was his job to repair the waggons and teach you at the same time . |
11 | I think that one of the things that get me at the moment is the time keeping , it 's very bad |
12 | Most people vary enormously in the reserves that they have available , so that the things that floor them at the end of term may be the same small irritations that they sailed through at the beginning . |
13 | The idea was for Swedish studios to shoot films based on Scandinavian stories and aim them at an international market . |
14 | The firm collects the waste in lorries and processes it at a plant in the village of Cam Brea , producing 5 tonnes of black tin per week . |
15 | The airlines , facing their fourth successive year in the red , are urging the EC to drop plans to lower maximum noise levels and nitrogen oxide emissions , arguing that they could increase operating costs , reduce the resale value of operators ' fleets and put them at a competitive disadvantage to international rivals . |
16 | Diluting it and mixing in it into slurry lagoons or spreading it at a low rate on grassland was a method used in the past , but even that may not be possible now . |
17 | In its case , however , the eye-spots are on the front wings and are exposed by suddenly spreading the folded wings and directing them at the attacker . |
18 | Nellie had packed the two children 's bags and left them at the door . |
19 | But our intention is to take account of your views and address the issues that concern you at the earliest practicable opportunity . |
20 | He sat on the top step , raised the automatic with both hands and aimed it at the arm that was writhing in the aperture below . |
21 | All the other times were just a way of reminding myself of the realities and provoking you at the same time . |
22 | Once again , start with the largest flowers and place one at the top and one at the bottom of the design , and then two staggered in the middle . |
23 | Serving and former guardsmen stood to attention as Princess Diana , dressed in black , took the wreath from two old soldiers and placed it at the foot of the memorial in Horseguards Parade . |
24 | The little pulls of wind playing with the leaves were getting stronger now , shaking the petals from the wild roses and throwing them at the diners as if they were confetti . |
25 | The trees poise to eject leaves and hurl them at the wind , there is nobody in the big house to see the park 's invasion by the people , the iron benches under the elms are empty , each foot curling into a clutch of leaves . |
26 | After this he was a little unlucky with injuries and left us at the end of 1935–36 , having served honourably and well . |
27 | ‘ He would either go with the victims or meet them at the Macro warehouse in North Acton . |
28 | Moreover , the observer at A forms a picture of the white hole on the basis of all the light rays that reach him at the same time . |
29 | In short , the consumer called the tune and the operators who prospered were those who best identified the needs of the consumers and met them at the right price . |
30 | She' took sandwiches and ate them at the school . |