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

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1 ‘ Any more than it 's possible for me to work up at the college with all those strapping lads running round in jockey shorts and have no reaction whatsoever . ’
2 He said , said you were just standing there and all of a sudden he said you looked at me looked back at the wall just went pee he said it 's all come out , it 's all splattered all over the wall he said , you did your fly up , wiped your mouth , washed your hands and went out again as if nothing had happened .
3 Pa has given special permission for the godparents and me to stand inside at the Jonah window , while he does the immersion outside .
4 ‘ Well , ’ I asked impatiently at the end , ‘ is n't Mrs Reed a bad woman ?
5 As I wrapped myself in my gas cape and crouched down in a corner of the trench , I gazed up at the sky .
6 I gazed up at the building .
7 Yet again I gazed intently at the lighthouse , the beach , the palapas , the palm trees and the reef .
8 He walked off and I gazed blankly at the cricket match .
9 I gazed down at the reclining form .
10 Move along ! " bawled the orderly , and as I shuffled away I gazed appealingly at the white-coated figure .
11 From floor 110 , the highest point on the island , I gazed back at the midtown outbreak of skyscrapers , the Chrysler and the Empire State in their midst .
12 I mean even at the risk of probably er the other suppliers making a bit more than us if it means that .
13 Er but I mean basically at the end of the day , I mean you have to think about to what extent you can increase your sales .
14 Until I moved in to the Rectory at Seend , I lived briefly at the Bell Inn , St Edith 's Marsh , Bromham , near Devizes .
15 The kite had a tail of twisted magazine-pages — Guns and Ammo , which I got regularly at the time .
16 I was not Boat Race standard , but I got by at the level of intercollege competition .
17 Despite its limitations and difficulties , dowsing was one of the sources of inspiration for the Dragon Project , which I mentioned briefly at the beginning of the last chapter .
18 Yes , I stopped off at the
19 But I am not so sure that I should have recognised what I recognised unconsciously at the time of writing : that I was in a state of helplessness , the helplessness of being a non-person .
20 I expect I woke up at the wrong time .
21 I woke up at the part where he was telling me it had been a mindless fling , and I should n't get upset over it .
22 I came here at the beginning of the week thinking that this was my last tournament for the year , maybe forever , ’ Evert said .
23 I came here at the instigation of your letter , believing myself to have secured a position .
24 My wife is a business woman with two shops and I came out at the height of the rag trade jamborees .
25 It really is I mean I I still feel guilty and it might sound daft to you , but I still feel guilty and what would my have done about I was down in London a few weeks ago for a meeting and I was coming back on the sleeper and I got the train to Euston and erm I came out at the wrong spot , so I had to walk out of Euston Underground and then round to go to Euston Station rather than going through
26 I groan inwardly at the prospect of a night playing Happy Families with a bunch of desk-jockeys and number-crunchers .
27 Having recently had a pacemaker installed I have nothing but praise for the treatment I received both at the Friarage Hospital in Northallerton and the Freeman in Newcastle ( a Trust hospital ) .
28 I look carefully at the dead fly still gracefully adorning the corner of the screen .
29 As I look around at the happy faces it is difficult to realise that the German Army is only a few miles away across the River Seine where they are defending Le Havre .
30 I look around at the milling people , imagining we 'll be split up into smaller groups and led through the blank doors to sit in armchairs and watch a TV set on some kind of plinth .
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