Example sentences of "[pers pn] [vb past] [pers pn] [adv] at [adj] " in BNC.

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1 I expected you in at 5 for your tea .
2 I caught him up at last .
3 He got the sack , cos he got up and left his job overslept and annoyed erm Rachael because she woke him up twice and said come on you 've got to go to work , he said alright then , she , she went back to bed thinking he 'd get up and of course he were still laying in bed , I woke him up at five to eleven , said come on you 're an hour late , but when he got down there they said no it 's no good you 've got the sack , and he said well it 's your own fault then cos you were woke up twice by Rachael at nine o'clock , he had n't , he could have got up and gone to work , just idle we met him twice , it really upset him
4 I talked him down at one point
5 But although I chose it virtually at random , this does not make it ‘ typical ’ , any more than the horrific Bihar gaol described by Sinha ( 1978 ) in which 143 people had died within three years .
6 getting a bit half two , I took him up at twenty to by the time I came down it was quarter to three , he was really rubbing his eyes
7 But they 're all going to wonder why I dragged you along at this time of night .
8 Saw them at ten to nine , and then she passed them again at ten past nine .
9 After buying me lunch in a new concrete hotel called , romantically , The Interflora , she drove me back at high Skoda speed through the centre of town — choke full out , engine howling in second gear as we skidded across wet cobblestones , clipping kerbs and narrowly avoiding the numerous potholes and dug-up sections where slow attempts were being made to repair the water mains , shattered by the minus-twenty-five February temperatures .
10 No spark , no enjoyable crossing of swords with someone , no delight in teasing — and yet , really , she knew him not at all .
11 They threw us out at four o'clock and in all that time I had n't said a word , just listened .
12 They rang me up at eight o'clock one morning to be there
13 from Budgen 's , when erm ah , you know at Chris , Christmas they had it down at one seventy nine a pound , did n't they ?
14 they snapped it up at that price that his er sold and then they could n't pay er when , when the time came , you know the everything went off , so they sold it and bought something else and they 've made a lot of money on that so they 've paid it off and have er a lot of money on the house
15 It moved him not at all .
16 Normally , he let it through at 5.43 , except that on that particular Saturday he received it a minute or so late .
17 He rang me up at nine o'clock .
18 He rang it again at seven o'clock at night to warn the gleaners that their work for that day must end .
19 He took it seriously at first , affronted that anyone could say anything about anyone so close to him , but before very long , he saw the funny side .
20 erm But they were disappointed when John Thorn equalised after another five minutes and he put them ahead at half time by two one .
21 He did it carefully at first , only a handful at a time , saving every shilling made .
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