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

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1 But that , it does n't say after the SAT , the written comment can be made er , where we send er D and I reports home at the moment , i.e. er , just after half term in the second term .
2 Erm , and that 's about it really , erm , she lives in at the minute , and this was a gentleman called in the sky .
3 But then I 've got ta meet Emma and she stands up at the top .
4 And of course , ’ adds Myra , as she looks up at the lights on the hills where the Bakers live , ‘ Howard and Felicity . ’
5 Here the Harper clan gather , a small tribe , frail , ageing , on the threshold of 1980 , in the presence of the sky : here thirteen-year-old Celia , young , aspiring , judgemental , reflects upon the past , as , long after her usual bedtime , she looks up at the stars and plots her own future .
6 She looks down at the figure slumped in the chair , sees the skull under the frail skin which hangs loosely from the bone , at once tight and yet with too much of it , the bony fingers picking at the fringes of the rug .
7 When she arrives back at the WPGET 's headquarters , she will find that Alison Nicholas , a key player in the 1992 Solheim Cup , has handed in her notice as a member of the WPGET 's board .
8 Her eyes are hot , she stares out at the water , at the summerhouse .
9 She winces visibly at the memory .
10 Back on the main road , it turns right at the junction in Gleann Beag , passing a complex of handsome farm buildings , and ascends a long incline where much-needed improvements have taken place .
11 In fact , he turns up at the Harlem Hospital , a few blocks north , two days later , and is heckled as he walks along the wards .
12 It 's almost sad , and it goes up at the end .
13 " Andrew is a very complex character as a man , but when he 's composing , he 's just like anybody else — he sits down at the piano looking for the tune , " explains Black .
14 if you like the germ of the idea of the poem is alive in his mind because he sits down at the page thinking I 'm going to write a poem .
15 He kicks moodily at the carpet .
16 He looks up at the class .
17 He looks down at the table , smiling , and draws a face by running his finger through a ring of beer .
18 He looks down at the fag packet and taps it round another couple of revolutions on the table .
19 He looks longingly at the teapot and the tiny red cups .
20 When I ask our guide who lives there , he glances disapprovingly at the slums .
21 He glances back at the stones of the air shaft .
22 He glances down at the table , as if the answer might be written on a beer mat .
23 ‘ This is fantastic ! ’ he shouts back at the porter , now several floors below him .
24 One per over per batsman is the ration , with a bouncer being defined as a ball passing over the batsman 's shoulder as he stands upright at the crease .
25 They are sitting by the eye of the stream where it looks up at the sun before it weeps down the mountainside .
26 It looks closely at the range of policies developed by local government and in so doing assesses the relative responsibilities of various professional and political groups for their initiation and enactment .
27 Minutes from the centre of Sant' Agata it looks out at the Bay of Naples and onwards to Mount Vesuvius .
28 It looks only at the side of business interests who think only of trade liberalization .
29 The new fifth television channel , wherever it is situated , will open up further opportunities for programme-makers when it starts up at the end of 1993 .
30 Here Trogus introduces a note of realism which is echoed by Livy when he describes how at the beginning of the second century B.c. a third of the Greeks of Ampurias — a secondary settlement of the same Phocaeans — manned their walls every night in fear of the neighbouring Jberians ( 34.9 ) .
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