Example sentences of "[adv] i [verb] at the " in BNC.

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1 Luckily I lived at the higher end of the village so my house was not affected .
2 Naturally I jumped at the chance . ’
3 ‘ It was worth doing , or so I thought at the time .
4 As I say , I could have destroyed you , or so I thought at the time , but you 've turned out to be a lot tougher than I had imagined … not vulnerable or confused at all .
5 She was a real beauty , or so I thought at the time .
6 So I waited at the ‘ phone and Jean-Luc Ponty rang me , and two days later I auditioned at his house .
7 But when he gets round to it , I think he 'll control them a bit more closely , now you can invest in that sort of fund quite safely , and although it wo n't give you any capital growth , because if they 're giving you ten percent income , obviously the capital growth 's going to be limited , but er if it 's the income that you 're after , not a bad thing to do , so I mean at the moment I may actually combine one income-type er P E P with one growth and income , where the , where the , perhaps the yield is about five percent .
8 I mean , fixed rates are dangerous because once you 've fixed , if interest rates then go up , you 've lost out on your er return and you ca n't get your money out anyway , so I mean at the moment it 's really erm er er very deeply into the cycle of low , of low interest rates .
9 So I looked at the two men again .
10 Mark Higgins is just 10 and said : ‘ I saw boxing on the TV and loved it so I started at the gym twice a week .
11 So I stayed at the hostel for four weeks .
12 I have to warn Professor that there 's more than one party can play that game and if he thinks that it is sensible to run the affairs of this council on deliberate obstructionism on the basis that if you go on long enough you can wear people down then I think it 's unfortunate , it 's bad for this council bad for the people we serve , it does frankly nothing for local government and I ca n't blame central government if it loses patience So I recognise at the end of the day that erm Mr has had troubles with some of his erm er newcomers he obviously needs to re-establish some control over his group .
13 and when ever anybody talks of fish it 's just me sitting at the table from dinner time and then she
14 Soon I arrived at the lime-kiln , which was still burning , although the workmen had all gone home .
15 Once more I glanced at the large flour mill , temporarily closed , despite the addition of a new silvery turbine engine to take the place of water power .
16 I suppose that in some recess of his mind he was recalling the old cliché about honours being handed out like lollipops , but the more I look at the sentence the less I understand what he was on about or why it was considered worthy of preserving in print .
17 Would you mind desperately if just this once I paid at the other end ? ’
18 Limply I gazed at the mortal oiliness of the water , in which no creature could prosper , and the dockside crowds of welcome floating and swimming above like tropical fish .
19 Really I think at the end of the day it 's very similar to , to ours , although the price difference is a bit different .
20 Now I look back I marvel at the devotion of the teaching staff of these Evening Institutes , and also to the men who staffed the District Line from West Brompton to Westminster .
21 ‘ When I got out I looked at the car and the lorry and I just could n't believe it .
22 Now I look at the confident sexual swagger of young men with more than a faint envy .
23 Yeah well I meant at the beginning of them alright ?
24 Well I looked at the clock , it said twenty to eight , I thought sod it I ai n't getting up .
25 this lad was , now he was , coming in the bar , he sat just as you come in the door and then he moved to that long thing where we sit , well I go at the bar and Jackie was sat there Jackie , I said time to be social , no I cos I laugh , I were laughing me head off me and he 's jabbering away move like that , his arms moving you know , then he sets off to sing , well , la , la and Johnny said shut up I know Johnny put his glass of beer on the next table to ours and sets off to see Mickey , then he stands up this lad sit down you , must have thought for his beer , I think he was like , I says to Jack I says er you want to put his trousers is all undone , you know sat and his trousers what and his jumper , so our Johnny went he said get that covered up and , but he pulled it down like that , and now he took 'em out he walked through the door and his trousers were falling down but
26 Well I do at the .
27 Well I suppose at the , one of the best things , best examples of the difference was that my wife when she saw this house , knew that it was a house in which she could be happy , in which her tastes and , could spread themselves , erm rather than her tastes having to be curtailed by lack of space and lack of accommodation , erm , the fact that I had a garage which was essential er next to my house instead of some er quarter or twenty minutes ' walk away from where I lived as happened in London also made a terrific difference to comfort , erm the fact that there was a garden instead of a few windowboxes and a couple of tubs , all these things I think made one appreciate the fact that you 'd come , not only into a new town , but into a new way of life probably the fact that we had a staircase inside the house , which was the first time that we 'd had a staircase between our bedrooms and our living rooms
28 Ten minutes ago I knocked at the front door , waited in the street .
29 Suddenly I heard the noise of an animal jumping through the window , and immediately I hid at the back of my box .
30 Then I waited at the barrier , the motley flesh around me all pulsing with welcome .
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