Example sentences of "[vb -s] at the [noun] [prep] [noun] " in BNC.

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1 Whilst guidance on suitable mechanisms for multidisciplinary collaboration has at the level of planning been published , the use of mechanisms to co-ordinate information and assessment at the level of practice has been actively discouraged .
2 From the pre-crisis level of DM2.83 = £1 and US$2 = £1 , the pound has at the date of writing declined by some 14% against the DM ( or 17.5% below its central rate of 2.95 ) , a similar amount against the US$ , and 12% against its trade-weighted index .
3 Keith stands at the bar in Oz East .
4 ‘ The fact that it [ JAH-BUL-ON ] stands at the pinnacle of Craft Freemasonry makes it well nigh impossible to change .
5 The landlord of the Fox and Hounds in Cotherstone , which stands at the entrance of Baldersdale and was to become the front line headquarters for the film makers , scoffed at this idea .
6 The dead were carried in wicker coffins from Keld along the corpse road , stops being made along the way for food and drink , and every so often there were great " coffin stones " at the side of the way where the pallbearers could rest the body ( one such stone still stands at the side of Ivelet Bridge ) .
7 Public subscriptions provided a replica of Davies 's statue in Barry Docks and his now stands at the end of Llandinam Bridge , in sight of his former home .
8 A statue to him stands at the junction of Seagate and Castle Street , Irvine .
9 This section looks at the range of services and how the family doctor service will be run to meet your needs .
10 This section looks at the range of techniques you can choose from before we move on in the next chapter to examine different ways video can be related to the rest of the language programme .
11 However , if one looks at the size of family , the findings are fairly consistent : in the 1948 French study , for instance , housewives with one child put in on average a seventy-eight-hour week ; in the 1950 British study a sixty-seven-hour week , and in the present study a seventy-one-hour week was the average figure for housewives in this group .
12 This chapter looks at the perceptions of parents of their role in the assessment of their child 's special educational needs as part of the Statementing process carried out under the 1981 Education Act .
13 If one simply looks at the level of unemployment amongst architects over time , it is difficult to identify a clear pattern linked to any of the regulatory reforms .
14 Sun , he said , looks at the level of maintenance required and sends the relevant person for the job — if a high level of expertise is needed to deal with a particular problem , then a highly qualified engineer will see to it .
15 Martin Sherwood looks at the life of Sir Norman Haworth , the first British organic chemist to win Nobel prize
16 He looks at the window over Tite 's shoulder and says something like : ‘ Oh … early days yet . ’
17 If one looks at the majority of market experiments in which convergence to the market equilibrium is rapid , one sees that the decision-problem solved by the subjects in such experiments is relatively simple ; recently , however , there have been a number of more complicated market experiments in which the subjects face more complicated decision-problems .
18 If one looks at the diversity of approaches to the development of education management in the past four decades , it seems that there are two or three which will meet new needs .
19 She suggests a synthesis between the two approaches which looks at the diversity of girls ' educational experiences , and the ways in which schoolchildren challenge class and gender controls .
20 The sociolinguistic approach to peer communication records naturalistic dialogue and looks at the structure of conversation in terms of maintaining discourse effectively ( Garvey , 1984 ; McTear , 1985 ) .
21 In the first of a two-part report , Mike Edwards looks at the problem of pollution — often dubbed the urban curse .
22 It looks at the explosion of mobile , global money in the 1980s encouraged by the electronics communications revolution , and how it affects people 's lives .
23 In the second of his special reports into the crime debate , Bernard Ponsonby looks at the state of Scotland 's police and their ability to combat crime .
24 It looks at the reasons for dissatisfaction at the ways in which complaints are handled , highlighting an example of an elderly couple who had waited two years for someone to come round with a colour chart , prior to decorating the outside of their house .
25 Daphne Metland looks at the shape of things to come this Christmas
26 Joanne ( 4.4 ) on the other hand , looks at the shape of pieces .
27 This chapter looks at the relationship between genes and organisms in a new way .
28 Evaluation looks at the relationship between teaching and learning : it therefore , logically enough , engages the participation of both teachers and learners .
29 This drift towards investigation through interrogation is altogether clearer when one looks at the provisions on detention which are to be found in the Police and Criminal Evidence Act .
30 They did not , for instance , examine how a head looks at the development of fellow-staff after the time of first appointment .
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