Example sentences of "[vb past] [pron] at [art] [noun] " in BNC.

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1 Then he took the stones from their pouch and laid them at the bottom of the Bowl .
2 ‘ He met me at the station … ’
3 Rich and Syb met me at the station .
4 I had supposed that Aunt Louise would be in bed , but she met me at the door ; opened it , in fact , and held it ready for me to come in , because there was something she was bursting to tell me : ‘ I 'm not staying in this cold place a day longer . ’
5 My faithful driver , Murphy , met me at the gate , taking my bags and walking me past the vagrants and money changers to his car , an old American model that had become something of a collector 's item .
6 Ken met me at the entrance and guided me into a side room .
7 On the appointed Saturday in October , Micky met me at the railway station and drove me ( in a fairly elderly Morris Oxford with a canvas hood ) right down the High as far as the University Church , and there he parked ( no problem then ) .
8 I first met them at a trial .
9 One met them at every turn asking plaintively , ‘ Has edyone god edy andihysterbine tableds ? ’
10 He met them at the gate and was smiling .
11 His Lordship Monboddo , wearing a little round hat and a farmer 's suit , met them at the gate .
12 And er also many engineers when they were out their time , they went to Glasgow and for a few years , he , everybody who went from Galashiels , word got through to him and he met them at the station and got them settled in their digs in Glasgow .
13 Although the other judges would not look at the assessors ' lists , Burn met them at the hall and compared his list of preferences to theirs .
14 He met them at the gates of the airfield ( still a debris of contractors ' equipment surrounded by barbed wire ) and informed them gravely that if they entered — no difficult matter — they would be breaking the law .
15 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 .
16 My results were received with general disbelief when I announced them at a conference near Oxford .
17 I got nothing at the table right .
18 One of the lads asked me at a dance how I had earned my living before I had got married .
19 ‘ Do you really wonder , ’ he asked me at an embassy function in west Beirut , ‘ why we wo n't claim compensation ?
20 Hawkins , a Devon merchant , had seen that the demand for slaves from Africa was increasing in South America , and in 1562 he sailed — in the way many Englishmen were to do in the seventeenth and eighteenth century — to West Africa , bought slaves , took them to the Caribbean ports , and sold them at a profit .
21 And he h He sold them at a profit of thirty three and a third percent which is a third .
22 They told you when you asked them at the club .
23 I got them at a craft fair at farm .
24 The printed text of Taskopruzade says that Molla Arab , having studied under Khidr Bey ( Hizir Bey ) at the Sultan medrese in Bursa , became his at the Darulhadis medrese in Edirne .
25 Their landlord visited them at the flat to recover back rent .
26 Well somebody built them at the boat builders in Orkney built some .
27 Once at Finsbury Park , the cameras caught them at the sound check , in interviews , backstage , and relaxing before the gig .
28 Well the Fox prediction tonight is that Oxford United will draw and probably beat them at the Manor .
29 ‘ We found them at the home of Nigel , your predecessor .
30 Sundowner time found me at the Clachaig Inn ( JTR either went there or to the Temperance Hotel in Glencoe Village on the edge of Loch Leven ) after twenty-odd miles wandering and walking .
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