Example sentences of "[noun sg] [conj] [pos pn] [noun sg] at the " in BNC.

  Next page
No Sentence
1 FRANCIS Maude may feel sore about losing his seat and his job at the Treasury , but not for long .
2 The APA now says psychiatrists should stick to describing a defendant 's mental condition and his motivation at the time of a crime .
3 Whatever the circumstances an open and frank discussion must take place between the new employee and her manager at the earliest opportunity .
4 For very form 's sake , and because , after all , Stair was his brother , he had stayed with the party through one act of a musical comedy at the Gaiety Theatre where they had made so much noise that their departure at the first interval must have pleased the audience which they had left behind , had gone to Quaggers — Quaglino 's — to dine — which meant drink — in a private room , and were now on their way to crown their evening 's pleasure by ‘ Pushing the boat out for Havvie ’ , Stair 's witticism .
5 His son Graeme must take some of the blame for this , for his approach at the first extra hole found sand and his drive at the second left his father with an uneven stance on a bank .
6 Many dolphins and porpoises are particularly vulnerable to these poisons , because of both their coastal habitat and their position at the top of the food chain .
7 Uncertainties about the depth of the top of the Sherwood reservoir and its quality at the target location meant that the task was not an easy one .
8 It 's a terrible thing to lose your husband and your home at the same time .
9 ‘ It had the Flint Investments insignia at the top and your signature at the bottom with chairman printed under it . ’
10 She straightened , holding the small of her back and her bulge at the same time .
11 Tommy Cooper talking at length about when he ruled at the Den and we 'll be talking to about his Norwegian career and his arrival at the City ground .
12 There is no doubt that the great majority of senior staff in polytechnics would prefer much greater freedom from their local authorities , hence their support of Model B in the 1981 Green Paper and their disappointment at the form which the National Advisory Body has taken .
13 the sound of whose surname and its positioning at the start of the final stanza aurally and visually rhymes with ‘ Declines ’ which similarly ends a sentence as the first word of stanza six .
14 Now , although St Petersburg is full of some of the greatest treasures of the world , full of riches that have been handed down from the imperial days , there is very little about the tsar and his family at the time of the revolution .
15 The Pozsgay era there was as unremarkable in Hungary 's cultural life as his tenure at the party review had been .
16 This most recent result is the culmination of a series of tests performed by Alain Aspect and his team at the Institut d'Optique Theorique et Appliquee at Orsay , near Paris .
17 They could n't be relied on to cope with the situation and our safety at the same time .
18 In its ‘ strong ’ form , this emergent cosmology of biographical medicine places the patient and his biography at the centre of ‘ the medical gaze ’ and relegates hospital medicine to a purely technical role ; in its weaker form , the two cosmologies are different , but equal .
19 If the signals only vary slowly , and respectively represent the small-signal conductance and resistance at the operating point and are given by the slope of the static characteristic and its inverse at the operating point .
20 Dacic , who specialises in Eastern European artists such as Braco Dimitrijevic and Georg Ettle noted with satisfaction that her audience at the fair continued to be ‘ insiders ’ , intensive collectors from Belgium , England and the Netherlands .
21 I am grateful to the hon. Gentleman for the way in which he expressed his sympathy and that of his party and his revulsion at the events that have occurred .
22 Section 87 requires that the successor shall occupy the council house as his home at the death of the tenant and shall have resided with the tenant during ‘ the period of 12 months ending with the tenant 's death . ’
  Next page