Example sentences of "and at the [noun] " in BNC.

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1 ‘ By looking at what happens after the long-stay hospitals have closed and at the fate of people who might in the past have found their way into such institutions ’ , MIND argued , their survey ‘ offered a more exacting test of care in the community . ’
2 Held in Villa Grimaldi building , once a torture centre where many Chilean disappeared prisoners were detained under Gen. Augusto Pinochet " s 1973-90 military regime , the meeting ended on Nov. 11 with the decision to create a " network for life " throughout Latin America , aimed at the rapid denunciation of cases of disappearance whenever they occurred , and at the achievement of international legislation declaring the repressive practice a crime against humanity .
3 There is some fibrin formed at the edges of the wound and at the plug periphery but no fibrin is seen within the plug for about 15–30 minutes .
4 He says we 've had alot of people round looking at the garden and alot of the Chelsea pensioners have been looking in and at the sign above the door and saying ’ Ah yes , I think I know that person ! . ’
5 Dale and his colleagues in the 1930s showed that acetylcholine , in addition to its other properties , was a local hormone relaying messages at autonomic ganglia , that is at critical points in the nerve pathways which control the heart and blood vessels , and at the sites where nerves activate voluntary muscles .
6 Loyal armed forces launched a counter-attack against the rebels , and just after midnight there was a burst of heavy fighting around the palace and residence , the Ministry of Defence and naval headquarters , and at the Miranda base .
7 One was kept at each terminus and at the Robin Hood , hung from a large hook near the top of a traction post .
8 Easter Day is saved from anticlimax not least through its measure of sung praise at the Sequence and at the Gospel .
9 I have always been interested in educating an orchestra from the musical point of view and at the level of human contact .
10 On this basis , it can be suggested that the two mathematical educational subcultures existed both at the level of ideas and at the level of social relations .
11 The point is that there could be such a command and at the level of that command where , as it were , the answer would be received , no information would ever be received about the other senses of ‘ bar ’ that the system as a whole might happen to know about in its dictionary , and the procedures for surveying that range of senses would never be revealed .
12 Attempts have been made to relate expenditure on R and D to performance indicators both in aggregate terms and at the level of particular industries [ Pavitt , 1980 ] .
13 Such value judgements must , however , be controlled and at the level of functions : this might lead to precise descriptions of particular skills appropriate to one or the other but would not justify the grandiose claims for ‘ logic ’ , ‘ objectivity ’ and ‘ culture-free neutrality ’ which we have been examining .
14 We recommend that future project initiatives of this kind should give much more thought to the structures and procedures , both within project schools and at the level of overall planning and coordination which are required to ensure that initiatives are not confined to a particular time period or grant , and that the inservice implications of good practice resulting from the project are capitalised upon .
15 It indicates the power and importance of consumption trivia , both in everyday social encounters and at the level of meta-social alignments .
16 Christopher Brumfit , Professor of Linguistics in Education at the University of Southampton , suggested that a closer interaction with the teaching of English might be more productive , both in teacher training and at the level of the school .
17 Corporatism tends to " fit " the facts best with respect to the major functional economic groupings of capital and labour ; with respect to issues of economic policy ( especially in so far as they concern incomes ) in periods of boom when labour can not be easily disciplined by market forces ; and at the level of the central state .
18 Many groups , and even more interests , are outside the corporatist system ( clients and consumers in particular ) ; many issues continue to reveal a pattern of competitive politics ( especially moral issues like abortion ) or protest politics ( especially on environmental issues ) ; and at the level of the local state the absence of any real concern with economic policies and the central concern with consumption issues suggest that the soil may not be so warm for the development of corporatist arrangements .
19 Yes , I wanted to emphasise the way some men feel constrain before , not because I want to suggest it 's now becoming a problem for men and we should be worrying about them , but because you asked what prospects there were for doing something about it and I think if something 's to be done about it , and it 's a problem of everyone devising new standards of behaviour , it 's very important that quite large numbers of men should be prepared to play a part in trying to work out what these standards should be , and there is quite substantial interest in trying to do that , both at the level of the teaching staff at the university and at the level of the undergraduates .
20 Fred sighed to himself as he looked at the rest of the meat lying on the chopping block and at the pile of dough still to be rolled out .
21 However , his scrap with brother Joey enthralled the crowd and at the finish they came over the line almost together .
22 In the big race … the womens championships … the favourite Andrea Whitcombe who was out to win for a record equalling third year in a row was beaten in to second place by Lisa York of Leicester … they raced for nearly four miles and at the finish there was just three seconds between them
23 The Railway Gazette reported that it had become an attraction to sightseers , rather like the early days at the first Euston and at the inauguration of the great European and American stations .
24 The group of houses are now just a few yards away and at the sight of the French civilians lining the route , all tiredness is now forgotten and a spring has appeared in our step .
25 And at the sight of it , Clara 's spirits faintly rose , because the colour a blue-green was one which , at that age , she rather fancied .
26 He was in the hall next morning as Maggie came downstairs , and at the sight of her he walked forward to watch her descent .
27 From Tripoli the advance into Tunisia involved him in some of the bitterest fighting of the war : in the Matmata Hills on the outflanking of the Mareth Line ; at Wadi Akarit , where he had a narrow escape when he received ( as he modestly put it , doubtless so as not to worry me unduly ) ‘ a wallop from a piece of spent shell ’ , but was not badly injured ; and at the drive north to Enfidaville .
28 Our discussion this time will restrict itself much more to the two chosen passages , and will need only to take a brief look at a few details of the narratives leading up to them , and at the stories that immediately follow them .
29 The shows will take place at the Duna InterContinental in Budapest on June 15 , the Atrium in Prague on June 18 , and at the Marriot in Warsaw on 22 June .
30 The shows will take place at the Duna InterContinental in Budapest on June 15 , the Atrium in Prague on June 18 , and at the Marriot in Warsaw on 22 June .
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