Example sentences of "[pron] [vb past] [pers pn] [adv] at the " in BNC.

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1 I remember that she asked me to guess what was inside a sort of pasty served to her on Thásos , and that I got it right at the first guess : macaroni .
2 ‘ He kissed me on the cheek and I waved him off at the door and watched TV before going to bed .
3 I saw him once at the beginning of this month .
4 I saw you both at the Castle , then I lost you . ’
5 Er , I am mindful chairman that I embarrassed you acutely at the end of education meeting on Friday , erm , and I know that I , I have a circumstance coming up in February , where I have a child who is unexpectedly on a training day , erm , on a day where I actually have two meetings of this council , now either I get substituted , or we arrange for a one off carer situation .
6 It was pink , not red like Hank Marvin 's , which disappointed me rather at the time .
7 LEEDS manager Howard Wilkinson has renewed his optimism about winning the championship following his team 's 3–0 win over Chelsea , which planted them back at the top , a point ahead of Manchester United who have two games in hand .
8 Actually , she opened with Mozart 's scena Misera , dove son which tested her somewhat at the top of the stave , but there followed arias from Manon , Don Pasquale and La Forza del Destino which she gave with commanding conviction , variety and characterisation .
9 No I was talking to Julie yesterday , she phoned me up at the
10 James was full of praise for the medical teams who helped him both at the scene and at Coleraine hospital .
11 ‘ When you killed me back at the Miskatonic ?
12 I think that , too , must have been part of an identity check , particularly as she repeated it again at the end . "
13 She rubbed her back at the same time ; bending to the floor had hurt her .
14 ‘ Yesterday Margrida was saying that when she saw us together at the lunch she felt we shared an affinity , ’ Ashley recalled .
15 She picked it up at the third ring .
16 The phone on the wall close to her rang and she picked it up at the second ring .
17 Although the formwork was quite heavy , we pegged it down at the four corners as a precaution .
18 Er very often Australian Aboriginal societies you meet men the corroborees at these ritual gatherings and if you 're one of the club , then in the ritual they 'll tell you , they 'll say hey , you know , you know you know you say where did you get all these kangaroos you know oh we got them over at the so and so ranges or down at the so and so water hole that 's where they all are this week , and this is very important information for man .
19 We met Audrey and Margaret on the way , and we saw them again at the next stop , Motueka , 60 miles to the north .
20 We saw them off at the airfield , we being Sogono and myself .
21 When I went to what was in effect not merely the memorial of the fifty aft after fifty two years of the people , but of course really the funeral service of the pit and when I went to that here was the chance to dedicate that also , we did it actually at the Memorial Garden where all the pit people are buried and that is right you see , picking up out of the past not sticking in the past , and arranging it as you might say as in that banner to move on into the future .
22 We suggested it right at the beginning , before it all grew so big .
23 If anybody put him off at the 17th it was me jumping up and down .
24 You know they joined it right at the beginning , they , they 're the ones where the momentum 's come from erm they 're the ones asking the rich peasants to join them , the middle peasants and they 're the ones leading the revolution , th they are the riff-raff if you , you know , want to take one view erm they have n't got anything to lose because of their position er er er er as erm a rich peasant may say , you know , what is there to keep me from joining yo you people have neither tile over your heads nor speck of land under your feet , and it 's true they have got nothing to lose but these are the ones that are pushing the ideas forward and forming the associations .
25 and they fetched me down at the hospital
26 They kicked me out at the end .
27 ‘ So it will confuse the trackers mightily — especially since I think they picked us up at the Luxembourg border crossing , then followed us in our Mercedes down the autobahn . ’
28 He pinned her down at the CI5 computer centre , and over the phone briefly explained what he and Doyle needed of her .
29 He told her so at the very end .
30 He threw it hard at the Dodger , but missed and hit Charley Bates , who started to shout with fear .
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