Example sentences of "he [verb] [pron] at " in BNC.

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1 He made himself at home .
2 He made it at 9.30pm yet heard Mr Gilbey tell Diana he was about to meet friends for dinner .
3 He points it at me .
4 And he h He sold them at a profit of thirty three and a third percent which is a third .
5 By the time he sold it at auction ( Sotheby 's , New York , May 1989 ) it had given him a real net annual rate of return of just under 20 per cent , after allowing for commission , insurance and inflation .
6 Pitching the F1 as a ‘ super-bike ’ , he sold it at a retail price of £13,000 .
7 He met me at the station … ’
8 He met her at a literary dinner a couple of weeks later .
9 He remained an active supporter of CND , boasted that his daughter had been conceived on an Aldermaston march , and had once horrified Margaret Thatcher by wearing his CND badge when he met her at a gathering of northern business people .
10 He met them at the gate and was smiling .
11 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 .
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 It was n't until the launch had vanished around the tip of Vittoriosa , and the soaring golden bulk of Fort St Angelo , that she realised he had n't told her what time he expected her at Casa Sciorto tomorrow evening .
14 Mrs Cullam did n't even look at him and when he asked her at what time her husband had come home on Friday night she said laconically , ‘ Quarter past eleven . ’
15 Pat was having an affair — and in a crowded restaurant , he asked her at the top of the sentorian Williams voice : ‘ Well tell us about this man you 're having the affair with then . ’
16 ‘ Do you really wonder , ’ he asked me at an embassy function in west Beirut , ‘ why we wo n't claim compensation ?
17 He led her at a good trot through the country lanes , by Bramfield and Tattle Hill , through Thieves Lane to Hertingfordbury .
18 He led them at a smart pace along the path where the railway had been and though they grumbled about the branches scratching their legs his sister and his brothers followed him .
19 The rest clambered into their saddles , and followed him unquestioningly as he led them at a canter downslope to where the hills opened out and patches of ground could be seen where the snow was melting .
20 ‘ When he was here , did he make himself at home ? ’
21 After several attempts he got him at last on a bad telephone line .
22 Did n't he cover it at home ?
23 He levelled it at the gunman then let his hand drop to his side .
24 He seated himself at one end , and Emily sat beside him .
25 He seated himself at his desk and , as usual , resorted to holding open a book — this time it was Who 's Who — turning a page to and fro .
26 He found her at the Borrehus at Falster where Søren , her third husband , manned the ale taps and where she ferried peasants and their cattle across the sound .
27 When he found her at Leominster , Hereford and Worcester , he spent Pounds 68,000 on the house next door .
28 A classic example was when he found himself at the centre of media and national attention after taking over the chairmanship of the troubled Westland Group in June 1985 .
29 One day he found himself at Market Harborough but with no idea where he was going .
30 It was not until he had accepted and had received travel instructions that he found himself at Bletchley Park as part of the Enigma team reading German cypher traffic .
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