Example sentences of "[adv] be at the " in BNC.
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1 | Since calls must be made close to a node , then why not simply find a telephone kiosk — must work these days and the cost will only be at the standard rate . |
2 | Such a positive-sum game must be contrasted with a zero-sum game in which the game to some can only be at the expense of others . |
3 | If you prefer that the algorithm should not invent new weights , but only select existing weights from the parent strings , then the crossover points marked ’ x ’ may only be at the ends of 8-bit sequences . |
4 | It will only be at the end of time that God 's glory will be fully visible in the church . |
5 | QA activities may not necessarily only be at the end of the implementation phase . |
6 | The evidence from the case studies suggests that while change will occur it will only be at the margins , but this may be enough to achieve significant behavioural change in service providers . |
7 | The header need not necessarily be at the beginning of the file . |
8 | The module header need not necessarily be at the beginning of the file . |
9 | However , Parke may soon be at the heels of Del Harris , the 20-year-old England No. 1 who had to battle hard for the second day in succession . |
10 | We 'll soon be at the station , and it 'll be noisy enough there . ’ |
11 | Other radicals demanded that foreign policy should no longer be at the mercy of " the ideas , valuations and methods of a sporting aristo-plutocracy " or " the obscure convolutions of diplomatic staffs " , that " there must be an end of the secret diplomacy which has plunged us into this catastrophe " and that the working classes should " lay down our own terms , make our own proclamations , establish our own diplomacy " . |
12 | Er you see when I was , this would just be at the start of the First World War , oh damn I have n't put a switch in have I ? |
13 | Because it could n't wait until lunchtime and that , that 's perfectly understandable because he wants to feel in control of what 's going to happen to some degree , rather than just be at the mercy of someone else 's position . |
14 | The Fellowship stipend , which will normally be at the appropriate academic salary scale , is paid direct to the fellow 's employer , and help towards other costs involved in the Fellowship may also be available . |
15 | Guarantee costs of these should normally be at the vendors ' expense . |
16 | Among the many shocks being delivered by the declining years of the twentieth century is that of discovering , after decades of thinking we were the true moderns , how modern they could already be at the other end of the century . |
17 | Some men would already be at the boats , others coming down the steep path from the village . |
18 | And it might easily be at the expense of tone if it was . |
19 | An improvement in one area might easily be at the expense of another . |
20 | I would usually be at the foot of the platform stairs as Billy went on at the start . |
21 | How does it feel , 8 years later , to still be at the cutting edge of feminist art practice ? |
22 | Most of the young birds will still be at the nest , and if the weather lets up , we might get across to the Treshnish Isles as well . |
23 | Some of the remainder must still be at the Institute in Rome ; a delegation from the Venice Soprintendenza and Padua 's Eremitani Church , which owns the fragments , is due to travel to Rome shortly to resolve the problem . |
24 | Even if there were agreement , much of the disputed territory would still be at the mercy of both Serb and Croat irregulars , acting outside the control of their Government , and those forces would continue to be a source of fighting and unrest unless they were disarmed . |
25 | Some churches are of basilican plan with semi-circular eastern apse ( though the altar might still be at the west end ) and a western or central tower standing on the ground . |
26 | ‘ I mean , Charles wo n't always be at the War Office . |
27 | Needles to be brought into holding position must always be at the opposite side to the carriage . |
28 | I make no bones about believing that this should always be at the lowest possible level , making me an enthusiastic decentraliser and a sceptical centraliser — whether to Whitehall and Brussels , or Westminster and Strasbourg . |
29 | Perhaps the feeling that you must of necessity always be at the client 's beck and call , and some clients have been known to take advantage of this situation . |
30 | ‘ British Sugar often want to move a load at very short notice and we must always be at the ready ’ he adds . |