Example sentences of "[noun] at [art] [noun] " in BNC.

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1 Only six of the 13 patients had a clear gall bladder at the end of the first procedure , but after further treatments that included cholecystoscopy , endoscopic sphincterotomy , and percutaneous cholecystolithotomy 11 patients had a gall bladder free of stones .
2 Only six of the 13 patients had a clear gall bladder at the end of the first procedure .
3 This can be multiplied manyfold in its unpleasantness , if you are a woman emptying your bladder at the time .
4 The walls seem to meet overhead to block out the sky and a chill wind blows as we approach the impasse at the head of the gully .
5 Hall could break the embarrassing boardroom impasse at the Victoria Ground .
6 I explained about the impasse at the door of the horse car .
7 And there is another aspect of the construction of a word which it may also be helpful to know something about : that some ( particularly longer ) words are built out of other words , by adding prefixes at the beginning or suffixes at the end .
8 We met a group of walkers at the top , who cheered as we raced for the cross .
9 The arrests of Islamic fundamentalists in April 1989 ( see p. 36603 ) were followed by a security clampdown in mid-May at the end of the Islamic month of Ramadan which included a ban on open-air prayer meetings outside mosques in many potential trouble spots including slum areas of Cairo and fundamentalist strongholds in Upper Egypt .
10 The sensationalist cover in 1977 which followed the death of a fan at a gig by The Radiators ( my then combo ) will take some beating as the PITS .
11 The baseball fan at the beginning of the century — free of the possibly inhibiting influence of women spectators and close enough to the playing field in those tiny ball parks to take immediate action against erring players or umpires — was , by all accounts , an abysmal churl .
12 You 'd travel down to the game on a Saturday , and if you met a Leeds fan at the train station , you could be sure that they were the best mate he 'd ever had , and they 'd tell you all the latest gossip that he 'd told them the last time they were out for a few pints .
13 David Speedie lost his rag with an invading fan at The Dell yesterday — but his one-man pitch clear-ing job could land him in hot water .
14 2 The defender throws the closed iron fan at the attacker 's wrist and follows up with a knife block .
15 But Bowler said : ‘ It is abundantly clear from our recent correspondence that the actions taken by the club were insufficient , despite 145 arrests and 20 ejections at the Test match alone .
16 After a number of break-ins at a Darlington shop a sharp-eyed witness contacted the police with details of a car spotted nearby .
17 After a number of break-ins at a Darlington shop a sharp-eyed witness contacted the police with details of a car which had been spotted nearby .
18 ‘ And regarding the break-ins at the government munition dumps , military vehicle compounds and hi-tech weapon factories .
19 Let's just check No it 's been quiet on break-ins at the moment .
20 To understand the challenge to the papacy that this scene represents , we need to look at the structure of the traditional Church and also at popular religion at the beginning of the thirteenth century .
21 It 's not just that , it 's something that people make , like they make cakes or clubs , or anything else , and this is the interesting thing in religion at the moment , the relativization which scares people , of course , who want it to be an absolute authority which they can just debase themselves before .
22 The distances between the two points were measured for each junction so that the driver 's mean speed at a junction could also be estimated .
23 Before Christine or Ann or any of the other girls playing realised what was happening , the pram began to run down the steep bank , gathering speed at every turn of its wheels .
24 Hmm speed at the window , yeah
25 Streamlined jockey Michael Roberts gave Lyric Fantasy the chance to find her feet in the early stages , but a sudden surge of speed at the furlong marker clinched the money .
26 Risk ratings and accident estimates were both significantly correlated with the two measures of objective risk , time spent at the junction , vehicles seen , and the average driving speed at the junction ( negatively ) .
27 There were also significant correlations with the actual accident statistics , r(1064)=0.142 , average weekday traffic flow , r(1064)=0.236 , accident estimate , r(1064)=0.278 , the time spent at the junction , r(1064)=0.246 , the number of vehicles visible in the film , r(1064)=0.201 , and the average speed at the junction , r(1064)=-0.118 , all of which are to a large degree measures of how much would actually have been happening at the junction .
28 The actual speed at the time is usually far too slow to allow for any use of the airbrakes , but there is plenty of room ahead for a safe landing .
29 The rate at which the angle is changed must depend on the speed at the time , and this has to be judged because there is insufficient time to check the ASI .
30 Evidence of speed at the time of the offence can be established from the length of skid marks , the severity of any impact damage or from witnesses etc .
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