Example sentences of "[verb] [pers pn] in [art] [noun sg] at " in BNC.
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1 | A very good friend helped me in the house at this time in our lives , and Shanti loved her dearly . |
2 | I 've sent Tuathal with a hundred horse to catch them in the ravine at Glen Farg . ’ |
3 | She liked Robert Urquhart and was attracted to him , even trusted him , unlike Spittals who was no doubt gleefully stabbing her in the back at that moment . |
4 | I think the game I think the game has done well in tackling that problem but I do n't think we as a society have done very well in tackling it in the country at large . |
5 | Before we had time to correct his mistake , Mr Postman had sat us in a row at the top of the courtyard . |
6 | ( c ) investors who hold large blocks of the target 's shares may find that if they attempted to sell them in the market at the same time the price would fall . |
7 | It requires deep-frying but , if you 're worried about the high fat content , quickly brown the strips of fish in a little shallow oil fist , then bake them in the oven at 180C/350F/Gas 4 for 10–15 minutes , and you 'll find they cook quite crisply with less fat . |
8 | We left Angelo by Land-Rover with the boats in tow , and put them in the water at a nearby jetty . |
9 | ‘ I remember passing you in the corridor at the INCUBI:IS building in Helsinki . |
10 | I had quite forgotten that Mrs Bailes occasionally tethered him in the kennel at the entrance to discourage unwelcome visitors , and as I half lay against the wall , the blood thundering in my ears , I looked dully at the long coil of chain on the cobbles . |
11 | Davide had turned up a coin , one afternoon , when he was mooning around ; it was a common enough type , the professor told him in the museum at Riba , where he took it for an opinion . |
12 | We put him in a pen at a secret location within Milton keynes , and then it was a matter of leaving him alone , and thankfully this fox has adjusted to the wild . |
13 | Each book should have a card within it , and when you take the book you sign and date the card and put it in a box at the location of the books . |
14 | Meet me in an hour at the top of the Opera House , on the tenth floor . |
15 | The rest of you I 'll see you in the morning at ten o'clock . |
16 | What is so odd , though , is that Lewis was tempted to argue the faith , to analyse and defend it in a manner at once so roughshod and so cerebral when it had come to him by quite other means . |
17 | ‘ Got 'em in a sale at … |
18 | ‘ I 'd have to leave 'er in a basket at the gate . ’ |
19 | ‘ I 'll meet you in the foyer at seven o'clock this evening , and we 'll find somewhere to eat first . |
20 | He raised them now at the two shaken women who sat facing him in the interview-room at Stowbridge police station . |
21 | Larger seedlings will block out the light from smaller ones , so try to keep them in a row at the back . |
22 | A TEENAGE mother banned from seeing her six-month-old baby girl after being charged with ill treating her in a cot at a London hospital ward , can now visit her under social services supervision . |
23 | He had shot one grouse and was aiming at a second when the first bird hit him in the face at 60mph , flinging him unconscious into the heather . |
24 | ‘ We can rehearse it in the lounge at coffee time , ’ he said . |
25 | He started keeping Fred and himself to timetables , so that she knew where she was , and cut out eating with Fred after the show or seeing him in the daytime at weekends . |
26 | He collared her in the staff-room at eleven-thirty . |
27 | " I met him in the toilet at the bus station . " |
28 | she immediately undercuts herself : ( " And even if you say something shameful to me I shall blame you in no way at all " ) |
29 | He took the crank-handle , inserted it in the hole at the bottom of the radiator and , encouraged by a chorus of ‘ One , two , three , heave ! ’ , swung it energetically until the engine sprang to life . |
30 | It put him in the forefront at the Department . |