Example sentences of "as [pers pn] [verb] [adv] at the " in BNC.

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1 I wondered , as I looked round at the massed ranks of chaps , young and old .
2 I felt sure that if Mr Reed had lived he would have treated me kindly , and now , as I looked round at the dark furniture and the walls in shadow , I began to fear that his ghost might come back to punish his wife for not keeping her promise .
3 I felt a lump in my throat as I looked down at the first grave , the Balmoral on the cross was torn at the front as if a piece of shrapnel had smashed its way through the badge and into the soldier 's head .
4 Then , as I looked back at the dark , inscrutable carob tree , I did feel a faint touch of fear .
5 But none of this disturbed my mind or my body as I looked across at the girl in the coffee bar .
6 As I stared up at the clear sky from the bottom of the trench , my mind drifted back to Achnacarry and Fiona .
7 Even so , some brain cells were still working , as I stared inwardly at the nub of the problem .
8 One of the most striking facts of the Commonwealth , as I saw clearly at the Commonwealth conference in Harare , is the immense affection and admiration that exists for Her Majesty the Queen among all Commonwealth leaders and countries .
9 As I pull up at the back of the hotel Mr Shah is waiting with a folder full ; his expression , although friendly , contains around his mouth a little reproach that I should have been away from the action for so long .
10 As I look around at the happy faces it is difficult to realise that the German Army is only a few miles away across the River Seine where they are defending Le Havre .
11 The guns along the banks of the Orne were still firing as I arrived back at the jeep .
12 As I pulled in at the ambulance building , the switchboard had just received a message that a dead body had been found in Cathedral Road .
13 As I pointed out at the beginning of this judgment , the patient 's right of choice exists whether the reasons for making that choice are rational , irrational , unknown or even non-existent .
14 As I pointed out at the beginning of this chapter , education is on the threshold of a new era , which will have massive repercussions upon the issues of assessment and examination , with some of the proposed developments being viewed with considerably more apprehension than the GCSE was a couple of years ago .
15 A disgraceful decision , as I pointed out at the time . ’
16 I could n't look as I stood helplessly at the top of stairs listening to him bumping and thudding from step to step until he reached the bottom .
17 Shoot the next rack on the left also ; watch out for the sharp rocks as you turn right at the bottom .
18 ‘ I 'm rather fond of this shirt , ’ Vitor said , smiling against her mouth as she tugged desperately at the buttons .
19 Tonight she was smiling as she stared up at the screen , and Buddie had given her money .
20 As she stared up at the height a voice spoke from behind her , and she turned to discover that Silas Wilder had followed her down the track .
21 ‘ I 'm sorry , ’ she began to apologise as she turned the lock and pulled back the door , ‘ I should have — ’ Then she stopped , speechless , as she stared up at the tall figure of Robert Sheldrake .
22 She felt no surprise at hearing Luke 's voice — indeed , she felt nothing but a cold numbness as she stared round at the ruins of her home .
23 As she stared unseeingly at the advertisements in yet another newsagent 's window Folly felt the old anger come surging back .
24 Carrie leaned back in her chair and rubbed the tips of her fingers across her forehead as she stared down at the mass of papers on the kitchen table .
25 Still , she reflected soberly as she stared down at the water , being on the boat had at least served to clarify her thoughts in one direction .
26 But , as she gazed around at the chintz sofas , and the French-provincial-style velvet-upholstered dining-room chairs — which she could see through a far open doorway — it occurred to Laura that maybe it was the only way to preserve such sumptuous furnishings on a shoreline likely to be damp and salty in the latter part of the year , while , outside the large windows , she could see automatic sprinklers drenching the fine green lawns that ran down to the beach .
27 Lacuna appeared distracted , her face frozen in surprise as she gazed unseeingly at the ceaseless struggle .
28 Nadine 's voice was calmer now , subdued and contemplative as she gazed up at the ceiling .
29 Lindsey found her hands gripping the deck rail as she gazed out at the golden track made by the fading sun on the water .
30 As she looked again at the faces of her family she was ready to burst into tears and almost did so but Erika , moving lightly into the kitchen , said : ‘ Fräulein Silber thinks that I should stay with her next week . ’
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