Example sentences of "leave at " in BNC.
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1 | When you buy your spur , also buy bolts sufficiently long to pass through both spur and post to leave at least 25mm ( 1in ) protruding . |
2 | To avoid climbing in the heat of noon we decided to leave at daybreak . |
3 | Even so , you are advised to leave at least one clear day between the flight and an important business meeting . |
4 | It proposes a timetable for withdrawal , laying down that the Iraqis should start to leave at once , within a day of a ceasefire , and that they should be allowed to do so safely . |
5 | Cut them when they are about half open , but not right down to the ground ; be sure to leave at least two sets of leaves on the stem . |
6 | Southbound traffic on the A5 will be able to leave at Staples Corner in the normal way , but northbound traffic will be diverted , before Staples Corner , along Dollis Hill Lane . |
7 | 1 SCIENCE MUSEUM : Interview with James Goddard : he has to leave at 9.00 for Heathrow but will be on the premises from 0630 onwards . |
8 | Maybe she was just waiting for a chance to go abroad and wanted to be ready to leave at any time . |
9 | All of the youths studied were in their last year of school , and all were going to leave at the minimum school leaving age ( Corrigan , 1979 ) . |
10 | I was the last to leave at night . |
11 | ‘ I was tired and I had to leave at approximately five — in about two hours . |
12 | A police spokesman said : ‘ We had to leave at speed because emotions were running so high . ’ |
13 | The ferry for the outer isles was due to leave at six on the following morning , so I checked into the waterfront hotel where I had booked , then spent the day exploring Oban , and went to bed early . |
14 | And even where girls were successful in obtaining grammar school places , they were much more likely , as the 1959 Report on Early Leaving showed , to leave at age 15 , before any public examinations had been taken , thus losing one of the ‘ benefits ’ of a grammar school education . |
15 | They sort of could n't care less if you were going to leave at the end of the fourth year . |
16 | All their time was spent on the ones that were going to stay on , so ones that were going to leave at the end of the fourth year were never there and nobody sort of worried about them . ’ |
17 | It is urgent , we have to leave at once . |
18 | The Act buttressed the law on trespass with two new criminal offences : using or threatening violence in order to obtain entry to any premises , and occupying a house or flat and refusing to leave at the request of the rightful occupier . |
19 | Each campesino had been given instructions to always have ready 20 extra tortillas in case we had to leave at a moment 's notice , but even so , it was very hard . |
20 | Those of us who did carry on with the flight , masochistically addicted to the hellish aimlessness of it , were obliged to leave at New Delhi , and spend a day selling brightly coloured scarves and small gold elephants on a souvenir stall . |
21 | I was due to leave at five-thirty in the afternoon . |
22 | And that , I I was , my hus , during the time mother was ill , my husband took ill , now this is where authorities do n't give you any back up , instead of sending him to hospital which was fifteen minutes by bus , I could have visited him every day they sent him to the other side of the county which only allowed a visit once a week , and meant I had to leave at twelve o'clock and get home at six ! |
23 | The pan Am flight to New York was scheduled to leave at 11.30 a.m . |
24 | But you 're right , we have to leave at once . |
25 | If I 'd been at school I think I 'd have wanted to leave at Easter . |
26 | And then it was only because I knew I was going to have to leave at the crack of dawn on Friday , and I would n't have time to fix anything up . ’ |
27 | They had drunk pots of strong black coffee and he had to leave at 8 . |
28 | ‘ Because you do n't have any plans to leave at all ! ’ jeered Deana . |
29 | We were to leave at two and return no sooner than five-thirty . |
30 | ‘ Why do n't you order breakfast in your room and we 'll be ready to leave at eight tomorrow morning ? ’ |