Example sentences of "[adv prt] [prep] [pron] at the [adj] " in BNC.
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1 | A thousand windows , some reflecting the dying light of the day , stared down with him at the trampled earth , the lines of washing-poles , the puddles . |
2 | ‘ Well , you remember that I want you in by one at the latest . ’ |
3 | He spends all day on the practice ground sometimes and this paid off for him at the German Open . |
4 | Western attention was mostly directed towards the Kurds , who rose up against him at the same time , but the greater threat to Saddam and the heavier loss of life was Shiite , Not Kurdish . |
5 | He 'd run to follow it , missed it at the traffic lights , almost caught up with it at the next . |
6 | Stop me if you 've heard this , but one of those gunsels opened up on somebody at the rear entrance of the Regal Arms Hotel . ’ |
7 | I got on the bus at the terminus at the bottom of Avondale Buildings and rode it back and forth to the other end of the line , sitting on the top deck , not knowing where I was or what I was doing , until the conductor came up to me at the other terminus , after my fifth trip , and asked : ‘ You all right , mate ? ’ |
8 | This is strongly implied in John chapter 6 where the Spirit is brought closely into relation with ‘ eating his body and drinking his blood ’ and so being confident of dwelling in Christ , being fed by him , and being raised up by him at the last day ( 6:54,56,63 ) ; just as he is in chapter 3:3–8 in connection with the new birth . |
9 | She held her breath for a moment and then the tears and the breath burst out of her at the same time . |
10 | Dietary fibre is the substance which makes the waste matter from the food we eat pass through us and out of us at the desirable , speedy , natural rate . |
11 | I thought we might be out of it at the 4th hole in the last round . |
12 | Unbecoming as it was to their cred , the embarrassed band loaded themselves and gear into the vehicle and tried very hard indeed not to be seen getting out of it at the other end . |
13 | According to them she had been at school that day and came out with them at the usual time and , as far as they knew , had gone the usual way home . |
14 | So we need to get the word of God , go out with it at the right time and leave it with people . |
15 | ‘ I was so afraid you would be hurt , then I found myself wondering if I could trust David or whether he would walk out on me at the first sign of trouble . ’ |
16 | Swales might , at last , have made a wise decision — if he does not go back on it at the first sign of failure . |
17 | He got one back on us at the 15th to put him three shots behind again , so the 17th was going to be a crucial hole . |
18 | Had he gone out with the schedule the results would have been chaotic , yet he himself had not seen these double questions until they were pointed out to him at the internal testing stage . |
19 | Again Colm went two up at the tenth but Michael got it back to one at the 12 a birdie at the 14 brought the lead back to two up . |
20 | The head man could get bitten , the tail man could get doused with noisome excreta — and if they both missed their grasp , then the middle man got both bad ends of the snake coming back at him at the same time . |
21 | It is surrounded by buildings , the houses being built on to it at the eastern apse . |