Example sentences of "[pers pn] [verb] [indef pn] at [art] " in BNC.
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1 | I got nothing at the table right . |
2 | I was convinced that the law would back us , so I found someone at a local law centre and she confirmed it , so we went back . |
3 | He felt her slim shoulder move under the thick fabric of the tartan shirt , " as much as I know anything at the moment , that 's what I think I 'll be doing . |
4 | I was half asleep when he showed us up to our rooms , Ward and I sharing one at the rear of the building , which , in place of beds , had a double-tier bunk in the corner . |
5 | I heard everything at the Opera and Musikverein . |
6 | I felt nothing at the time and naïvely smiled to myself when I spotted it later . |
7 | ‘ I had something at the hospital . ’ |
8 | If you saw someone you knew and you shouted out to them , you were in dead trouble , even if you shouted hello , or if you asked someone at the next table for a cigarette . |
9 | Yeah , cos like if you 've got three Ss or something then you put one at the bottom of the pack and keep the card if you 've got an |
10 | That as compared with the one you can put in that you know one at the top one at the side and . |
11 | So provided you get something at the right level of sophistication , you should n't go far wrong with any of the mainstream graphics software currently available . |
12 | Was she carrying anything at the time ? |
13 | She said anyone at the party could confirm her story . |
14 | Bad when we meet someone at the station , but unbearable when we are seeing them off ; not present when we are departing ourselves , but unbearable when arriving in London , if only from a day in Brighton . ’ |
15 | 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 . |
16 | ‘ They knew nothing at the bookshop , sir ; his sister , Sara , seemed very upset ; she would n't believe that he was n't at home . |
17 | ‘ But even though they had nothing at the ports , if you offered one of them a bar of chocolate or a pack of cigarettes they would turn it down and tell you to send it to the Front . ’ |
18 | If you invited him to make one at a dinner-party , you expected him to talk intelligibly ; if he published a volume of poems you expected him to write the sort of thing that the average well-educated man could understand because it came within the orbit of his own experience . |
19 | It is not a happy precedent and if Mr Major is to avoid it , he needs somebody at the Treasury who commands confidence , and who deserves it . |
20 | He risked everything at the short 15th after his five-iron tee shot finished among the rocks . |
21 | That is , he does nothing , he does nothing at the moment but prepares for action , or he takes action . |