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

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1 In determining whether a haulier is of good repute , the LA looks at the applicant 's conduct generally , not just at any previous convictions he may have .
2 If , then , the narrator is characterized as a woman , and , moreover , a woman who boldly presents this tale of female prostitution and financial gain as a jape in which the wife as well as the monk triumphs at the husband 's expense , the implication that women innately conform to the medieval antifeminist stereotype is doubled in strength .
3 The case continues at the city 's crown court .
4 They added a small amount of hydrochloric acid as ‘ electrolyte ’ to carry the current , the oxygen from the water bubbles off at the anode and the hydrogen appears at the cathode .
5 In each case , the Creole comes at the end of the speaker 's turn .
6 THE LOOK looks at the concept of logos .
7 The boardroom rises at the company compare with a rise in profits of 13 per cent .
8 The Trail starts at the south-east of Brighstone Forest where it meets another long distance route — the Tennyson Trail .
9 The trail begins at the north end of the
10 LIFESPAN always gives an immediate response to a user interaction , but not all the options are handled while the user sits at the terminal .
11 I am grateful to my hon. Friend for the kind remarks at the beginning of his question .
12 As the moratorium on takeovers within the industry ceases at the end of 1993 the combined group will be in a position to be a predator and former hunter Manchester-based Granada could turn into the hunted .
13 The mind boggles at the complexity of a system using twelve slide projectors producing 4,000 pictures during the 2¼ hour performance .
14 The world 's biggest consumers of sausages are the Chinese , so the mind boggles at the potential .
15 The fourth and final section of the chapter looks at the role of the Jews in modernist Berlin .
16 Fig 101 The wind bends at the shoreline in an offshore breeze and tries to cross it at 90 degrees .
17 The young lad sings ‘ Smoke gets in your eyes ’ — the wind snatches at the song , hides it in the trees
18 The research looks at the implementation of two such policies whose basis has an economic rationale : namely , competitive tendering , and the financial-cum-economic appraisal of capital schemes .
19 Although the programme finishes at the end of the month , head gardener Carole is still thinking ahead and planning for future displays .
20 And so er , they changed hats , when they get there , and the chauffeur 's introduced a as the professor , goes on the platform , and of course the professor sits at the back of the room with the chauffeur 's hat .
21 He has this right in relation to goods which the defendant owns at the time the sheriff receives the writ .
22 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 .
23 All women qua women should be strictly excluded from entering the sanctuary where the priest stands at the altar .
24 The instability originates at the interface , which then thickens into a region containing salt fingers .
25 The Princess lives at the end of the same road .
26 Then , unseen at first , a small but subsequently vociferous crowd of lads out on the piss gathers at the corner of the bar .
27 knife at the back of the saw , they , it is a bit dangerous , erm where 's the guard goes at the top
28 The village stands at the terminus of the great trench occupied by the inland Loch Maree , the river forming a link .
29 At Holme-on-Spalding-Moor in East Yorkshire , the church is sited at the top of a prominent hill and the village nestles at the bottom .
30 This is evident not only from the fact that the jurisdiction of the Legal Services Ombudsman under sections 21 to 26 of the Act stops at the moment when a complaint enters into the jurisdiction of a disciplinary tribunal : section 22(7) , but also from the fact that in section 27(3) Parliament refers to the process by which a barrister may be disbarred or temporarily suspended from practice by order of an Inn of Court without any hint that it disapproves or wishes to alter in any way the manner in which for centuries the Inns have made orders for disbarment subject to the visitorial jurisdiction of the judges .
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