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 .
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