Example sentences of "[conj] [verb] [pers pn] at the " in BNC.

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1 In the corner of another carriage there sits , his face screened by a magazine , some lonely soul who has no one to bid him adieu at this end of his journey or welcome him at the other .
2 ‘ He would either go with the victims or meet them at the Macro warehouse in North Acton .
3 The man heard or sensed him at the last moment and turned with his hands coming up to a fighting stance but Maxim feinted through them and hit him low in the stomach .
4 Alternately , the Commissioner and his most senior colleagues invite them to Scotland Yard , or visit them at the ALA building nearby .
5 Do you want to give them now or do it at the end ?
6 Everything goes fine until , having chosen the number of blend steps ( or leaving it at the default number ) , I click on OK .
7 The disorder that had seemed to him for decades to determine the course of events regrouped itself like a pile of iron filings suddenly organized by a magnet , and he had a flash of optimism when it appeared quite possible that men in the days to come might wish to find out more than concerned them at the moment .
8 Like someone in a trance , she gazed at the clasp that fastened it at the throat .
9 That shooting The London boxing promoter Mickey Duff said : ‘ The only thing that worries me at the moment is his speedy recovery . ’
10 I like it when you 've got the FX actually going through the amplifier , rather than adding it at the desk , because there 's a certain quality and tonality when everything 's going through that guitar speaker .
11 Even if I did n't have a job that keeps me at the other end of the country for most of the year , this sort of place could n't provide a living .
12 I think that one of the things that get me at the moment is the time keeping , it 's very bad
13 Than calling you at the office . ’
14 But I , but I think you know the , the , the thing that I found erm most difficult as you say was , was actually completing the C C Q and I think part of it and asking the question but it is , certainly it would be easier to do it using that on your knee rather than doing it at the table because I was aware that I was turning away
15 65 ) that the historian 's duty is ‘ to rejudge the conduct of men , that generous actions may be snatched from oblivion , and that the author of pernicious counsels , and the perpetrator of evil deeds may see , beforehand , the infamy that awaits them at the tribunal of posterity ’ .
16 Most people vary enormously in the reserves that they have available , so that the things that floor them at the end of term may be the same small irritations that they sailed through at the beginning .
17 the sad news for golfers is that you 've a better chance of watching the sport than playing it at the Oxfordshire club … membership is being limited to 750 and the joining fee is twenty five thousand pounds …
18 A sentiment that ambushed her at the coldest moments .
19 The scene that greeted her at the top was already less frightening than it had been when Phoebe arrived .
20 Moreover , the observer at A forms a picture of the white hole on the basis of all the light rays that reach him at the same time .
21 But our intention is to take account of your views and address the issues that concern you at the earliest practicable opportunity .
22 Then he took the stones from their pouch and laid them at the bottom of the Bowl .
23 There was not a needy person among them , for as many as were possessors of lands or houses sold them , and brought the proceeds of what was sold and laid it at the apostles ’ feet ; and distribution was made to each as any had need' ( Acts 4:32 , 34–5 ) .
24 And Glenn Close 's stubborn and pain-ridden performance as Sunny makes you sad for her and hate her at the same time .
25 First , the testator takes a blank piece of paper and signs it at the bottom .
26 The main duty of the foresters of fee was of course the safe keeping of vert and venison : the Forest rolls show them searching for , arresting and attaching offenders , and indicting them at the Forest Eyre .
27 And er I remembering Dad , once he bought a cherry tree , and went up to get all these here cherries off the trees , and when we got them we used to wipe them and put them in a bag , and sell them at the fairs .
28 When he got there , he pulled an enormous bell-mouthed gun — I imagine it was a blunder-buss — from his belt and levelled it at the monster .
29 We jumped out and met him at the rear of the vehicle and tried to show him a letter of introduction from the Algerian Ambassador to Britain , Lakhdar Brahimi .
30 In short , the consumer called the tune and the operators who prospered were those who best identified the needs of the consumers and met them at the right price .
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