Example sentences of "[pers pn] [verb] at [adj] [noun sg] in " in BNC.

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1 And I noticed at one point in the discussion , this was queried by H B F. I think they feared that we would n't at that stage we 'd be opening up free for all of the kind which we 've obviously been seeking to avoid thus far .
2 The bedding which I observed at first hand in 1954 in the peasant community of Pul Eliya was nothing like as grand as the stereotype ; but , apart from some minor differences , it had all the same elements and for the most part they occurred in just the same sequence .
3 As I discuss at greater length in Chapter 10 , your first visits should just be a matter of getting to know the site , by wandering around .
4 You only have to look back over what 's er happened over the last few years in terms of for example O S Two , Microsoft Windows , a variety of Unix , and you 'll see that technologies will come along and however sound a decision you make at one point in time the market circumstances and potentially mean that what was right for you then not the right .
5 I have therefore to agree with both the councils , that the comments you have just made and which you make at some length in your proof on this point , amount in effect to a late objection .
6 Trained by Richard Hannon , Lemon Souffle has n't run since she scored at scintillating victory in the Cherry Hinton Stakes at Newmarket in July .
7 Do you feel at this point in time that it 's all been worth it ?
8 Because this is a test of observation and not of memory , make sure you look at each item in relation to the others , noticing not simply the objects themselves but the pattern they form on the tray .
9 She decides at this point in the story , that nothing is too bad for those people who have tried to humiliate her throughout her life .
10 We gazed at each other in stunned silence .
11 I 'm delighted and I 'm sure you 'll be delighted to hear the advice of the business convenor that we suspend at this point in time .
12 None of the translations really does full justice to verse 20 , and we 'll do a little detective work when we look at that verse in a few minutes .
13 But before we look at each step in turn .
14 In order to make some sense of these debates about changing class boundaries , we look at each class in turn , and draw in our analysis on two highly useful concepts , the concepts of ‘ social closure ’ and ‘ social reproduction ’ .
15 However , when we look at continuous speech in English utterances we find that these tones can only be identified on a small number of particularly prominent syllables .
16 So a modern sexual dimorphism is explicable in terms of erm inter-male er conflict and it may be in the case of human beings er most of them are , for example the larger body weight of males that we saw when we looked at sexual dimorphism in human beings is probably explicable erm in terms of inter-male conflict like it is in chimpanzees .
17 They gazed at each other in silence , then Penry touched a finger to her lower lip .
18 They look at each other in mutual love and self-giving , a trinity yet together revealing the unity of the Godhead .
19 They stared at each other in hostile silence .
20 They stared at each other in the lamplight , then she sighed and said , ‘ Well , it is n't always hereditary ; it misses generations , so I understand . ’
21 Then they stared at each other in silence and saw into each other 's heart , sensing that each was a little afraid of what was to come , and of the powers that they felt were in their wings and across their lives and which had brought them together .
22 They stared at each other in silence , their roles reversed : Lydia fearful and Betty courageous .
23 They stared at each other in silence for a moment , surprised to find that they shared some fragment of a common cause : the unsolved mysteries that troubled them both , though twenty years and half a world apart , were somehow one and the same .
24 They stared at each other in mutual surprise , and then Sara 's feeling was succeeded by another which she recognised as pleasure — unexpectedly , pleasure .
25 They stared at each other in silence for a moment , before Laura hissed , ‘ It was Marissa !
26 Breaking apart , they stared at each other in stunned silence .
27 She met his gaze , and for fully thirty seconds they looked at each other in silence .
28 Again they looked at each other in silence , and then he said very slowly , ‘ I 've been to see Beecham and Holden .
29 They looked at each other in surprise .
30 They looked at each other in horror , and both cried out , " Brother !
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