Example sentences of "[indef pn] at [art] time " in BNC.
Next pageNo | Sentence |
---|---|
1 | As he later admitted in an interview with CA Magazine , ‘ I said to someone at the time , I never again want to conduct a debate lasting three years without once being able to raise my voice ’ . |
2 | What point in having , I suppose it 's my fault , I should have read these erm , bits added to it more carefully earlier , but it does n't seem to have anything in their about anybody who is actually claiming a carer 's allowance from looking after somebody at the time , and whether we should have a phrase in there that it does n't include anybody that is collecting from the D S S S or anything else for a carer 's allowance anyway , because you do n't want to double pay anybody . |
3 | Buy plenty at a time — or get them free from clinics — to avoid running out at an inconvenient moment … |
4 | That was something at the time that I felt I did n't really need myself . |
5 | One at a time . ’ |
6 | He advocates marking the stretchers off one at a time instead of squaring cross all four at once . |
7 | He cuts the tenon shoulders one at a time , and then lines them up to make a final pass if necessary . |
8 | ‘ We have to confront vast , very powerful baronies , one at a time . |
9 | And just to make things really tough the matches are rovers with each angler sent off one at a time to pick his swim , putting the emphasis on reading the water . |
10 | He also suggests that it might be a good idea if we move one at a time to avoid a ridiculous crush in the tent ; I should get up and move out , then he will get up and start the fire , then Nathan can get up last . |
11 | Beat in the yolks of the eggs , one at a time . |
12 | Beat in the eggs , one at a time , then the flour and spices . |
13 | Instead of the medical materialism of Hammer horror , we get a surprisingly restrained treatment of the play 's fuliginous cruelties : even when the Duchess is invaded by a chorus of madmen , they are ushered in one at a time by a beady-eyed supervisor wielding a corrective cane . |
14 | Beat in the sugar and the egg yolks , one at a time , then stir in the almonds and the cooled chocolate . |
15 | The best general advice for the consumer is to buy the masterpieces as Amadeus wrote them : one at a time , and with loving care . |
16 | I tugged him gently along the walkway , which was made of planks , I discovered , with short mooring posts sticking up at intervals , needing me to lift his legs over one at a time . |
17 | Beat in the eggs , one at a time , then stir in the onion while the mixture is hot ; after five minutes , add the bacon and liver . |
18 | Cream the butter and sugar and beat in the eggs , one at a time . |
19 | This suggested they had been attacked one at a time , and taken by surprise , which reinforced the verdict that two and not four men were involved . |
20 | When starting solids begin with tiny amounts , such as a teaspoonful and introduce new foods singly , one at a time , every four days or so . |
21 | She liked people one at a time . |
22 | Peel , halve and core them and place them in a saucepan … cover with the wine and a broken cinnamon stick and heat until barely simmering … wash the monkfish and pat dry with kitchen paper … just as the liquid begins to caramelise , add the lemon juice and stir vigorously … reduced to a quarter of its original volume … add the cubes one at a time … thread the piece of monkfish … reserving the liquid … baste the fruit continuously … intersperse with pears … hand the sauce separately … |
23 | ‘ He chose to favour us one at a time and the others were left out in the cold . |
24 | The techniques of control used in contingency tables involved literally holding a variable constant by considering its categories one at a time . |
25 | Later , he would be revenged upon them all , but he would take them individually , one at a time , when they were unprepared . |
26 | Beechams Pills could be bought one at a time in a spill for a penny . |
27 | From the point of view of an application system carrying out final plausibility checks , CLE- I logical forms emerge one at a time , with no scoring information attached , and the application must decide which one to accept using an essentially binary , absolute plausibility test . |
28 | CLE-1 , however , always imposes strong preferences , because of the way that reference candidates are tried one at a time in a depth-first fashion , with backtracking to the next candidate taking place when , and only when , the logical form involving the current one is deemed implausible . |
29 | If anaphors were to be resolved one at a time and left to right , nothing would yet have been done about ‘ him ’ , so the configurational contribution would be missed and reasoning would be inevitable . |
30 | Practical matters also reared their head when 15 teams were given three hours and a selection of Meccano , paper cups , cotton reels and other bits and pieces to make a machine that would take a bag of coins all in one go , and dispense them one at a time for sorting . |