Example sentences of "[det] [noun] [conj] [verb] at [art] " in BNC.
Next pageNo | Sentence |
---|---|
1 | There can be no logical distinction between that case and looking at the draft Bill to see that the statute as enacted reproduced , often in the same words , the provision in the Law Commissions 's draft . |
2 | We can go this afternoon and look at the King 's Road . " |
3 | A young motorist who crashed into another car while reversing at a fast speed escaped a driving ban at Whitby magistrates yesterday . |
4 | She walked a few feet and stabbed at the earth with the fork . |
5 | Glance at the sentences and memorize the next few phrases and look at the audience while you are speaking . |
6 | It is a relief to me to take up this pen and sit at a table and endeavour to sort out what I feel pressing in upon me and to know that if sense can be made of it you will make it . |
7 | Not only was the advent of computing perhaps rather longer and more protracted than in some other disciplines , but invariably it is the case that the very nature of computer application in history is rather different , and it is this difference that lies at the root of the oncoming problem . |
8 | It is this concept that lies at the back of R. P. A. Edwards ' attack on dial-access retrieval systems : |
9 | ‘ And we 'll come back to this room some day and laugh at the days when we all thought it would be so dreadful . ’ |
10 | Oddly enough , at the end of the 205 hours the subjects claimed that they could go on longer , that after the fifth day things had got easier , and indeed offered to stay awake for another day if paid at the ninth day 's rate . |
11 | Everybody reacted as one , condemning this nonsense and laughing at the bare-faced cheek of it . |
12 | It is this conundrum that lies at the very heart of the Section 28 debate — not to mention Labour 's problems with it . |
13 | As I stood watching him for a few seconds and looking at the damage to his farm buildings and the dead and wounded cattle around the orchard , I thought to myself . |
14 | The case trotted on at something slightly better than the conventional pace of litigation in this country and arrived at a point where each side had to ‘ discover ’ to the other all relevant documents relating to the matter . |
15 | But it is the realm of production itself ( of paid employment ) which is seen by this perspective as lying at the heart of capitalism and uneven development . |
16 | I stayed there for some time and looked at the castle , and then I walked on through the forest for about an hour . |
17 | I had known them now for some time and smiled at the thought of their good company . |
18 | The 20th anniversary of the launch of charity United Response took place amid much champagne and canapés at the Imperial War Museum , hosted by its president Martyn Lewis ( he of the BBC 's Nine O'Clock News fame ) . |
19 | ‘ We should be able ter look at these books an' see at a glance 'ow we 're doin' . ’ |
20 | The Figure omits the clones and probes spanning the rDNA region , because the majority of these clones also hybridise to over half of of the other YAC probes , and so it is not possible to place these clones and probes at a single position on the map . |
21 | It 's something very close to what I 'm saying erm and erm I 'm saying perhaps one thing in addition , which is that just as when we look into the future , which , as a historian , I 'm asked to do more often , I think , these days than looking at the past , but when we look into the future , we have different versions of what that future will be . |
22 | Terry saw other apes biting themselves and each other and gnawing at the bars , all classic signs of distress . |
23 | How can the poor woman explain that , probably like the majority of wives , she loved him most of the time , when he did n't snore in her ear all night or shout at the kids or keep her short of Bingo money . " |
24 | To check how much a paragraph is inset move the cursor into that paragraph and look at the ruler line . |
25 | He wondered if Heather , sitting in the same chair and gazing at the same view , had somehow bequeathed to him this reaction , or if it were entirely his own , a product of the self-pity Kingdom had identified . |
26 | It came as no surprise to mystics that DNA is found to function like a right handed helix in which each tread is of the same size and turns at the same rate of 36° per tread . |
27 | On this model of organic relationships , the lower animals are merely immature versions of humankind : they develop along the same scale but mature at an earlier point in the process . |
28 | But we need our own voice and vote at the top table to take us to the heat of Europe , not leave us on the periphery . ’ |
29 | Or again , it is as though the disorganized and random bursts of photons present in a beam of white light were suddenly all being accelerated and agitated to precisely the same frequency and directed at the same spot — to produce the awesome source of energy that we have come to know as the laser . |
30 | Fat Man and Little Boy ) , made the same year and released at the cinema . |