Example sentences of "[noun sg] [pron] [verb] at [art] [noun] " in BNC.
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1 | erm There was a great deal of difficulty I think at the court , as well as the rather glamorous exterior . |
2 | I had my camera with me and I saw there was a ladder up on the top deck and when I got up on the top deck it was quite a giddy height , not to be bit I looked at the mast then I climbed up the mast up three quarters of the way up the mast and er the view from up there looked right down on the causeway . |
3 | When he suggested Peter , of course I jumped at the chance — Peter was winning absolutely everything . |
4 | Outside in the cobbled farmyard I glanced at the side of the barn . |
5 | In the lavatory I stared at the mirror . |
6 | Looking back at him , she said , ‘ The only ambition I have at the moment is to survive my eighteen months with G.W. Fashions . |
7 | At an informal meeting of the Sino-British Joint Liaison Group , China also approved a 15-year extension to a licence for local utility Hongkong Electric which expires at the end of 1993 , and gave the go-ahead for a landfill project . |
8 | For a repetitive task there may be comparatively little going on in the mind which emerges at the level of consciousness . |
9 | Labour 's employment spokesman was blamed for much of the confusion which arose at the TUC on the issue . |
10 | Walker ( 1988 ) , in a study which looked at the race of young males disposed of by the courts in London in 1983 , found that of those prosecuted , more blacks had their case dismissed without trial due to insufficient evidence , suggesting according to Walker , that either ‘ … the police more readily prosecute black people ’ , or that ‘ the court requires more convincing evidence for black defendants ’ ( Walker 1988 , p.459 ) . |
11 | Below we include a brief extract from this study which looks at the problems and consequences of conviction for the business , ‘ respectable ’ criminal in comparison to the regular criminal — bearing in mind , of course , that the business criminal is far less likely to be convicted that most other types of criminal . |
12 | It is important to note that the political party system in the Republic of Ireland is largely based on the divisions in the national-popular consciousness which occurred at the time of the Irish civil war . |
13 | The crisis over the succession which emerged at the end of Anne 's reign did not so much divide the parties , but split the Tories . |
14 | The sum insured applicable to a claim is the figure which applied at the date of the loss , i.e. the sum insured at inception/renewal date plus the appropriate index-linking to the date of loss . |
15 | The principal of these is the Amotape breccia fan which occurs at the foot of the Amotape range , a part of the Andean system rising abruptly 1 500 m ( 5 000 ft ) high above the desert . |
16 | At birth a child enters the condition of infancy — a condition which ceases at the age of 18 years , or rather , at the first moment of the day preceding the eighteenth birthday . |
17 | What result you want at the end of the day ? |
18 | After making the tea she sat at the kitchen table to drink it , and was still sitting there when dawn broke . |
19 | so I said could Mike go in and do the fencing you see at the side , to keep the dog out |
20 | Jose Ramon , a new chef who arrived at the Guernica two months ago , will hopefully maintain these high standards . |
21 | She admitted being the busty brunette who shouted at a man : ‘ Get a load of these ’ . |
22 | At the same time , many critics show notable preference for stories with a moral conclusion over those which seem to offer simple entertainment ; and any critic who looks at a book from the angle of the potential reader rather than of the book itself is in danger of being tempted by false hierarchies . |
23 | For musicians , the lure of the West must be strong , and for reasons as understandable as basic working conditions and standard of living , but as a result we stand at a crossroads : how can we possibly avoid the continuing standardization of orchestral , instrumental and vocal production , and continue to have the opportunity of hearing music played in a style and tradition for which it was probably originally conceived . |
24 | In this chapter we look at the ways to develop the applications which use the database , including an analysis of data requirements , and in Chapter 7 we look at setting up different external views in the context of different DBMS . |
25 | Our six case-study schools whose procedures for combating truancy we report at the end , regularly monitored attendance and absentee pupils rates and were alert to ways of keeping disaffected pupils in school . |
26 | But , you know , if , if , if I 'd have put , when we , when we started to talk at the beginning of this term we had at the beginning a general discussion about what are we gon na put in land reform , if I 'd have come along to s to you and I 'd said well I think we should do this |
27 | In this study we aimed at the investigation of platelet activating factor synthesis in the gastric juice of normal healthy volunteers in vivo , in basal condition , and in response to pentagastrin . |
28 | A big difference from the episode we have at the vets each month ! |
29 | He became enormously interested in these papers and the effect they had at a time when many people thought Britain was on the brink of popular revolution . |
30 | From trees and undergrowth they fired at the victors again and again , as they swarmed over the wall in twos and threes , then in dozens and scores , and finally in hundreds . |