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

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1 Question of omitting it does n't arise unless until we get to that part of the plaintiff 's case and erm I shall hear the evidence of the plaintiff and the other witnesses first and the advocation can be renewed in due ti in due course at the proper time .
2 Although he has had relatively little experience at the commercial end of publishing , he chaired OUP 's finance committee for 13 years , and has confounded scepticism with OUP 's record since his appointment as chief executive .
3 There is a renewal of interest in localities and the relationships between broad structural changes and social and economic change at the local level .
4 Richards also had the benefit of solid support at the other end as Haynes steadily made his way to 184 , the highest West Indian innings at Lord 's , and with Lloyd chipping in a fifty the total reached 518 .
5 In 1982 I took the job of botanical illustrator at the National Museum of Wales .
6 From 1982–1990 she was Botanical Illustrator at the National Museum of Wales .
7 Even the Commonweal School group photograph on the wall : September 1948 , with Harry featured twice , having sprinted along the back while the camera tracked round , thus appearing with smile and combed hair at the extreme left and with smile and tousled hair at the extreme right .
8 ‘ Irish swimming enjoyed its finest hour at the Olympic Pool this evening , ’ he wrote .
9 Following extensive lobbying at the Select Committee stages of the Channel Tunnel Bill NOERC succeeded in promoting an amendment under which British Rail is required to consider post-1993 needs for passenger and freight services , especially for regions north of London .
10 The summer timetable saw very little change at the Western end of the Cambrian but a notable addition was an 07:00 Newtown to Birmingham service each weekday using stock and crews brought out a a passenger service from Salop .
11 Cos it 's not actually working algebraic that calculator at the present moment I do n't know what you 've got it programmed in What you 've got it at but it 's not working algebraic .
12 Skill is one of the most important elements in the champion 's make-up , because if he ca n't perform the right technique at the right time and in the right way , he will never make it to the winner 's rostrum .
13 ‘ It 's the right budget at the right time from the right Chancellor ! ’ he said , apparently to suggest Mr Lamont will remain in office through the next Cabinet reshuffle , and almost certainly the one after that .
14 ‘ It 's the right Budget at the right time from the right Chancellor , ’ said Mr Major .
15 I 'm sure you 'll agree it 's a matter of going into the right stock at the right time .
16 The great dream had turned sour when Dickinson , the former champion National Hunt trainer , failed to produce the required results in his first season as Sangster 's private trainer at the refurbished establishment .
17 But agile he is n't ; witness this rather half-hearted attempt at the long jump .
18 On the left a door with a frosted glass panel in it led into Tom Watt 's office , a long narrow north-facing room with a tall sash-window at the far end .
19 The thefts came to light early last year when Daniel Walker , head of the Islamic Department at the Metropolitan Museum , New York , was offered two pages of a tenth-century Koran by a London dealer .
20 Harry had come into the lower doorway at the right time , and was moving up between the tables to take his normal place among the young fellows of knightly family , his peers .
21 A huge rocky outcrop at the far end jutted up and beneath it a small river or burn flowed quietly , turning and twisting as it followed its banks .
22 After his ordination in 1953 , he spent three years as assistant priest at the Immaculate Conception Church , Glasgow .
23 The knight may hold ‘ his right course ’ ( XII , 43 ) but Envy and Detraction remain a hostile destructive force at the civilised centre as well as the savage margin .
24 In an imagined interview at the Labour Exchange , the protagonist claims that he has only been ‘ spasmodically in labour ’ , then immediately corrects himself by rephrasing the slip as ‘ employed intermittently ’ ( 19/21 ) .
25 It was difficult for Charity to make sense of the emotional jumble at the other end .
26 Alan , from Hatfield , Herts , watched Fallon , 35 , being jailed for attempted murder at the Old Bailey .
27 Athelstan stood outside his church and stared in pleasant disbelief at the blue-washed sky and the early morning sun as its rays danced and shimmered over the snow-covered roofs of his parish .
28 There was a party atmosphere on the FARMERS WEEKLY stand at the Royal Show on Tuesday afternoon as Farm Women 's Club members from Cornwall to Northumbria , from Carmarthen to Lincolnshire gathered for tea .
29 ‘ Maybe for a short time somebody takes a free course at the great university of misery , and pays attention to the things he sees with his eyes and hears with his ears . ’
30 Let's continue this look at the marine aquarium scene by looking at the latest thinking regarding the nutritional requirements of marine fish .
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