Example sentences of "[pers pn] [adv] at the [noun sg] [prep] " in BNC.
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1 | Trevor and then if you 've got all those bits and pieces together send them in at the end of the week using this commission claim form . |
2 | Or else you sort of jotted them down at the back of your mind , you know , to think about them later , but you never remembered , or you did but it was too late , they 'd gone , your head was full of other things . ’ |
3 | The operation of these laws being impervious to our preferences , men will challenge them only at the risk of failure . |
4 | Cut them off at the base with a razor blade or craft knife . |
5 | Can you drop me off at the apartment on your way home , Sergei ? |
6 | I got Bunny out of the pub just before chucking-out time and with a bit of persuasion he agreed to take me as far as Hackney , dropping me off at the end of Stuart Street . |
7 | A member of the local parish community will collect your son/daughter from home , bring him/her to SPRED then bring him/her home at the end of the session . |
8 | I have been encouraged to find that the young are not so predisposed to put me aside at the age of seventy and that a new generation of students and artists regard me as something of a cult figure . |
9 | Er , I am mindful chairman that I embarrassed you acutely at the end of education meeting on Friday , erm , and I know that I , I have a circumstance coming up in February , where I have a child who is unexpectedly on a training day , erm , on a day where I actually have two meetings of this council , now either I get substituted , or we arrange for a one off carer situation . |
10 | This should put you right at the top of the list of Martin 's favourite people . ’ |
11 | ‘ I 'll see you down at the river at three o'clock . |
12 | We were expecting you down at the Man in the Moon . |
13 | He 's fitting you in at the end of all his appointments . ’ |
14 | ‘ I 'm surprised Mr Lawler let you away at the end of your shift , ’ Maggie said . |
15 | As he ate , he opened and closed drawers , he examined papers and objects on his desk : ‘ I 'll let you loose in the west gallery and catch you up at the door to the stock-room . |
16 | I 'll meet you back at the cart in an hour or so . ’ |
17 | Ought to have you back at the front in a matter of days , ’ she added sadly . |
18 | ‘ Are you quite at the end of your resources , that you can not provide a meal of fish , or eggs or cheese ? |
19 | You want them up at the top of the sheet , where they 're going to be seen first ( they look that good ) . |
20 | If these two signals differ significantly in level , you will need to balance them up at the mixer before passing them on to the camcorder . |
21 | Well you see , you actually see tho them little punks collecting them up at the end of the night do n't you ? |
22 | Like get back the dustbins which took them out but she did n't bring them back at the end of the drive erm and I hope that Paul tells him off ! |
23 | The following morning saw me back at the surgery in order to collect not only my screwdriver but also the death certificate , duly signed by two doctors ( yes , they had managed to find the mortuary ) , without which I could not obtain a Registration of Death certificate , without which Nigel could not be cremated . |
24 | I would normally do the PM first thing tomorrow but they are n't expecting me back at the hospital until Monday and the PM room is tied up until the afternoon . |
25 | A sound engineer was supposed to fade them out at the start of the first edition in July '67 , but failed . |
26 | Buckley 's Grimsby Town have won five and drawn one of their last six to ease within sight of the famous names at the top — and nothing would give him greater satisfaction than to leave them behind at the end of the season . |
27 | It was probably a very good thing in far more ways than one , Harry reflected , that Aubrey would be living with them here at the farm for several months . |
28 | This , as argued here before , is the one question capable of splitting the Tory Party , at least to the extent of creating factions with a passionate attachment to their prejudices , and no great reluctance to insist on them even at the cost of deep party division . |
29 | He wrote round to fifteen builders on 22nd March and , with what today would be regarded as incredible naïveté , asked them to meet him together at the Office of Works on 24th March . |
30 | They 've got him down at the station for questioning . |