Example sentences of "[pers pn] [vb base] [adv] at the [noun sg] " in BNC.

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1 I mean even at the risk of probably er the other suppliers making a bit more than us if it means that .
2 Er but I mean basically at the end of the day , I mean you have to think about to what extent you can increase your sales .
3 I groan inwardly at the prospect of a night playing Happy Families with a bunch of desk-jockeys and number-crunchers .
4 it would normally , if I recall correctly at the time , there would normally been a memorandum listing new charges for each development
5 I stare again at the saddlebag , feeling sick .
6 I stare glumly at the coinbox .
7 And it was one of the critici criticisms that came out of the er I think it was one of the annual general meetings non-executive directors in there to oversee er basically as another control against Mister himself I suppose really at the end of the day .
8 I smile encouragingly at the hulk who has his twelvebore pressed against my breast .
9 But my contract of employment forbids me from getting involved in contentious politics ; I do so at the risk of having a court order taken out against me .
10 mm , I think maybe at the start though when I said do you have a beautiful body , maybe I asked the wrong questions , let me ask you this question at the end , do you like your body ? , er button one for yes and button two for no , and maybe we 'll get a different answer then , eighty five people said no they did n't have a beautiful body , but fifty six people here say yes they like their body , forty four is too many people who do n't , why not ? , who said no ? , why , why do n't you ? , yes
11 But erm I think really at the end of the day staff have only really had just that one day workshop ,
12 I work part-time at the station coffee shop at Parkeston Quay so I get cheap rail travel . ’
13 The signals you put across at the job interview can flag your future ambitions .
14 Because if you look closely at the background of every scene , you 'll see Dennis .
15 If you look closely at the situation and try to understand why it happened , you will be able to adopt an objective approach that stops you feeling anguish , prevents you from feeling a failure .
16 And er if you look also at the way that the stones fit together they 're ve they fit together very neatly on the aisle where by the small window whereas the central part of the church there 's much more mortar between the joints .
17 If you look carefully at the connector body you will see a triangle or other marker indicating pin 1 .
18 If you look carefully at the illustration you should be able to see the command that started QBasic and just below it the message Hello World .
19 Confronting and accepting the reason for the tension is often the best way of dealing with it , since if you look logically at the cause it is often not as bad as the imagination would suggest .
20 Where you look please at the word retinue which is figure two it means ritardando a bit slower .
21 You know right at the end he had those very gorgeous of his ?
22 Shoot the next rack on the left also ; watch out for the sharp rocks as you turn right at the bottom .
23 You turn left at the end of the drive , ’ he prompted slyly .
24 " Perhaps it is most convenient to imagine you are doing all that you do here at the behest of some distant ogre . "
25 Remember that if you return home at the end of the session with the work you planned to do uncompleted you can not expect to return the next day or the next week to find the situation exactly as you left it .
26 You notice right at the top of the column of that particular page , er when it 's highlighting that er that history .
27 ‘ And that 's why it 's vitally important we retaliate right at the start . ’
28 All these kinds of ambiguity can interact We look here at the interaction of anaphor resolution with word sense and with structural ambiguity resolution .
29 Our discussion of this toc is very limited , though we look again at the subject , also briefly , in 2.10 .
30 If we look also at the review sections , we see that already in the 1920s McKerrow takes the view that a " great period of discovery is rapidly coming to an end : " an age of English scholarship is passing , if not already passed " .
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