Example sentences of "[is] at [det] [noun] " in BNC.

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1 It 's at such times , as you sit eating a damp sandwich as water drips from your nose , as you scour the map for all the things you ca n't see , that you wonder why the hell you do it .
2 You know he , and he 's at that point now
3 It 's at that point that many women start trying to get back into the labour market and at that point it is extremely difficult , so I think that we 're talking about a number of things .
4 Have I hell ah going through the diary now , it 's at that stage , enjoy it ?
5 And that 's at that age !
6 yeah she 'll be in trouble wo n't she , she often gets her own drinks anyway , she sort of like , she 's at that age she can , it 's only when they get out there together
7 but he , he 's at that age now where I could have another kid and look after it quite easily if I had one , but I do n't wan na go through , not the pregnancy , but I do n't want to go through all the babies and getting up in the night and , one that 'll come out six months old
8 When he proposed a shilling on prescriptions , one shilling and that 's At that time , Ni Bevan started himself started to deteriorate .
9 seems like an hour and a half when it 's at that time
10 ‘ Or more likely he 's at some hotel , waiting to search our luggage before we can proceed . ’
11 Erm it 's at some venue in Leeds .
12 All the paintings were purchased through Christie 's at some point in their early history .
13 Antiques day at a the , this is the all the places it 's at this Sunday and it 's er , in Chester .
14 Salmon , who was an intimate friend of Picasso 's at this time , described a few years later his restless state of mind : ‘ Picasso was unsettled .
15 The Spanish writer Gomez de la Serna , a friend of Picasso 's at this time and an habitué of the Bateau Lavoir during his visits to Paris , recalls that Picasso 's walls there were decorated with reproductions of El Grecos .
16 It 's at this stage that the work is most interesting and most difficult .
17 It 's at this stage that one or other of the partners may start to get an eye so roving as to become a nose and take up with the first cloth-eared bimbo who gazes up or down and says , ‘ I ca n't believe you 're over forty — that 's sooo sexy . ’
18 It 's at this stage that mercury comes into the picture .
19 It 's at this point that so many people give up .
20 It 's at this point that you have to start making choices , and you have several options .
21 As early as I 3 days after implantation the embryo ( as , after many more cell divisions , the developing child is called ) will have its own blood vessels connected to the mother 's at this point , a membrane keeping them apart .
22 It 's at this point nearing the end of my open study I 've realised a connection between the four characters I have just compared .
23 It 's at this point in our agenda when er the world search it 's our agenda and er in introducing the report there are just four things I want to comment about .
24 It 's at this point that AIDS develops .
25 Let's take a butcher 's at those bugs .
26 However , it 's at these times that we are most punishing to ourselves .
27 Furthermore , an individual is at each moment only a partial manifestation of an identity revealed over time , what physicists call a ‘ sum over histories ’ .
28 The patchiness develops throughout the energy cascade ; as the eddies get smaller , so the fraction of the volume in which they are active decreases ( though the size of a patch is at each stage large compared with the corresponding eddy size ) .
29 If you listen to the music on individual programmes you will soon get a fair idea of where the playlist is at each week .
30 In December 1757 he tried to excuse himself ‘ as my abode is at such distance from the place where the Royal Society hold their weekly meetings as to render it not only inconvenient , but unsafe for me to attend them in the winter season. , A month later Ellis countered with , ‘ I scarce think it possible that Mr. Miller should have no one friend in the Society to send him word and , indeed , I had told Rivington to tell Miller I would be glad to discuss the matter at Fulham , and Miller ignored it . ’
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