Example sentences of "[adv] [adv] [to-vb] at [art] [noun] " in BNC.
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1 | Hyperactive and overactive young children often can not concentrate long enough to sit at the table and so teaching this is a very important part of learning to control them generally . |
2 | They come from all over to drink at the Bulls Head in Craswall , on the Herefordshire Wales border . |
3 | Unfortunately these proposals only exemplify the muddled thinking which seems so often to lie at the heart of Edinburgh 's traffic policies . |
4 | I say , ‘ Well , I did n't come down here to look at the scenery . |
5 | It is not enough to look at the company 's accounts : the nature of the market , the stance of competitors , likely technological changes have all to be considered . |
6 | Chairman , if , if I may and it is just basically to look at the recommendation and wonder you know perhaps if we 've got it the right way round er that 's all , where we 're saying er there are certain things still outstanding wh which we would need to re-relate before er issuing er general conformity notices I understand b but we 're almost taking that they 're going to do that without any doubt , now I do n't know maybe there are things not said in this report which are well understood , but and members of are quite happy to accept erm er s some more more changes to , to the local plan so that it does conform with with the structure plan , but I just wondered whether round the wrong way . |
7 | If you have decided not only to start at the starboard end , but also to tack onto port as soon as possible , then a different set of priorities apply . |
8 | The hotels and transport system are simply not up to scratch at the moment . |
9 | He turned away , and went downstairs again to drink at the bar . |
10 | Move on now to look at an area that 's er not frequently er does n't impinge a great deal on life in this country but it certainly does for travellers and for many people in the developing world . |
11 | We go on now to look at the importance of the dialogue , and the problems which can occur when communication breaks down . |
12 | At [ another ] desk sat Winston doing similar lists in red ink , sipping whisky and soda , getting redder and redder , rising and going out often to glare at the machine himself , hunching his shoulders , bowing his head like a bull about to charge . ’ |
13 | I left the industry in the early Seventies and came back here to work at the Max Planck Institute of Chemistry . |
14 | She took her drink to the salon , where the remains of the fire still glowed , and after a while she put on the lamps and went slowly across to look at the paintings . |
15 | Trying so hard not to weep at the demise of the old Post Office now replaced by a kit construction for other uses , I walked robotically to the cathedral like all the other tourists . |
16 | Marcus went white and jerked round sharply to look at the figure behind him . |
17 | It may be a spaceship , although it is moving too slowly to arrive at a star . |