Example sentences of "[noun] [verb] [pers pn] [adv] at [adj] " in BNC.
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1 | The early starts were a disadvantage , but Charles had minimized that by staying with Miles and Juliet and having the car pick him up at six . |
2 | He said , No Emma I ca n't there 's no way I can be at a wedding to give you away at nine o'clock . |
3 | His mouth touched hers lightly at first , then he deepened the kiss with a passionate hunger that their lovemaking had failed to assuage . |
4 | The bookmakers clearly believe Salsabil has the speed to win the 1,000 Guineas , William Hill putting her in at 16-1 for the Newmarket Classic . |
5 | We got a same day driver picking me up at five fo , five thirty outside the hotel . |
6 | David Swan joined them promptly at six-thirty . |
7 | Then she has Darren until May picks him up at seven . |
8 | Erm there have been attempts to brighten them up at various times . |
9 | the sailings from Holyhead get you in at seven |
10 | Daniel told them how at this time God had so loved the world that he had sent his only son to give it life , to be made just like them , so that God might live man 's life and man might through him come close to God . |
11 | He spent two-thirds of his day at a school ten miles away , and the rest of the afternoon looking through the older children 's comics at Mrs Neary 's until Diane picked him up at five . |
12 | I mean one assumes that 's why the Highway Authority put them there at that size . |
13 | Many miners apprenticed their young sons to the trade taking them underground at 15 , 16 or 17 years of age and paying them their worth , or less . |
14 | Olwen has hers on for half an hour of a morning , Joe puts it on at half eight and dead on nine o'clock that immersion 's turned off . |
15 | He admitted : ‘ Lawrie McMenemy took me off at half- time in Spain after I 'd been booked . |
16 | Oh God , he went in Sunday , Bill took him in at ten o'clock about sixteen mile here and sixteen mile back it is |
17 | The huge fire roaring in the hall beyond the small entrance chamber warmed her not at all . |
18 | Apparently this one and only brush with city life impressed him not at all . |
19 | When both trunks had been hauled on to the far bank they used the ropes to bind them together at various points along their length . |
20 | The bus landed him there at seven o'clock on a hazy morning and by lunchtime he 'd found a cheap hotel which was full of Africans in multi-coloured robes which seemed foreign enough . |
21 | Let me out unless the fires of Hell daunt you not at all ! |
22 | ‘ Why , I think it 's a splendid idea ! ’ cried Beegee , when Angela put it forward at Pow-wow . |
23 | His voice grated , but he spoke out clearly , perhaps even a little louder than was natural because it cost him such an effort to get it out at all . |
24 | ‘ If I had something to say I said it , ’ he recalls , ‘ but I did n't want you lot ringing me up at three o'clock in the morning . ’ |