Example sentences of "[adv] [pers pn] [verb] [adv prt] at the " in BNC.
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1 | Slowly I looked around at the other boys . |
2 | I glanced at her , trying to hide my embarrassment with a swift and flippant response , but I could think of nothing to say and so I looked back at the binnacle , then up to the long moon-burnished sea ahead . |
3 | At Portsmouth , Crabb was met by a local MI6 officer , using the cover name ‘ Bernard Smith ’ , and together they booked in at the Sallyport Hotel where ‘ Smith ’ gave his address as ‘ c/o Foreign Office , London ’ . |
4 | So he booked in at the John Radcliffe Cardiac Unit … close to his home in Marlow . |
5 | They worked well together and soon they tied up at the town quay . |
6 | Denis made no acknowledgement but before turning away he looked up at the sky , now completely hidden in dark cloud . |
7 | As Donna climbed the stairs slowly she looked around at the dozens of people entering and leaving the building , wondering how the hell she was supposed to find someone she 'd never seen before . |
8 | Instinctively she looked up at the sky . |
9 | Then instinctively she looked back at the building , and upwards towards Luke 's room . |
10 | And so hopefully you came back at the end of the day with quite a bou bag full on your bike , or a box it was , fitted in a carrier , full . |
11 | It 's as if he still lives there , so when I go past I look up at the window I 'd put him in . |
12 | I had to have a talk with Mrs Rumney and a few days later I called in at The Laurels . |
13 | Now I looked up at the ‘ sonic ’ photos on the wall . |
14 | Now he looked down at the table top , then sideways at his colleagues and back at Cameron . |
15 | Moodily she looked down at the ground . |
16 | well they go up at the side of it and down behind it |
17 | Milwall have the lead that 's the important thing here it came over at the far side of the penalty area , had got up for it Ray and the Kennedy there was also a Middlesbrough foot in there . |
18 | It would oscillate through the earth and back , until eventually it settled down at the center . |
19 | Rather it looks down at the scarred and broken Christ figure as if to say , ‘ Why ? |
20 | Then I looked up at the north-facing back of the house , at my own room . |
21 | Then I looked back at the table . |
22 | Then I called in at the Vecchio Reccione near Stringfellows for a glass of Valpolicella and a bread stick . |
23 | Then she looked around at the men on offer , braying nightclub fools mostly , and decided that , even without racing commitments and pain , she would be planning to leave early . |
24 | And then she looked back at the bed and saw the naked longing in his eyes , and something that was better than desire and that was more enduring than passion broke within her , and she moved forward , and said , ‘ Oh , my dear love ’ |
25 | Then she settled down at the dining-room table with her book purchases , which she had picked at random from the shelves of Tollemarche 's only book store and from the racks of one of the cigar stores . |
26 | They passed the greengrocer with his window full of apples and oranges , and the butcher with bloody lumps of meat on display and naked chickens hanging up , and the small bank , and the grocery store and the electrical shop , and then they came out at the other side of the village on to the narrow country road where there were no people any more and very few motor-cars . |
27 | And then he looked up at the front window . |
28 | Then he looked up at the Trunchbull , then at the tall stringy cook with her lemon-juice mouth . |
29 | Then he looked up at the new young golden eagle who had been available under special government licence and brought in as her replacement . |
30 | Then he looked up at the black smoke which came from the Forfarshire 's funnel . |