Example sentences of "[pers pn] [vb -s] [adv prt] at [art] [noun] " in BNC.
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1 | Erm , and that 's about it really , erm , she lives in at the minute , and this was a gentleman called in the sky . |
2 | But then I 've got ta meet Emma and she stands up at the top . |
3 | And of course , ’ adds Myra , as she looks up at the lights on the hills where the Bakers live , ‘ Howard and Felicity . ’ |
4 | 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 . |
5 | 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 . |
6 | 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 . |
7 | Her eyes are hot , she stares out at the water , at the summerhouse . |
8 | 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 . |
9 | Every Sunday he turns out at a hall on a council scheme in Edinburgh to play 5-a-side football with his friends , trying by his own admission to re-live some of the opportunities he missed when he left Carrick Vale Secondary School at 15 to pursue a professional football career in London . |
10 | It 's almost sad , and it goes up at the end . |
11 | " 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 . |
12 | 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 . |
13 | He looks up at the class . |
14 | He looks down at the table , smiling , and draws a face by running his finger through a ring of beer . |
15 | He looks down at the fag packet and taps it round another couple of revolutions on the table . |
16 | He glances back at the stones of the air shaft . |
17 | He glances down at the table , as if the answer might be written on a beer mat . |
18 | ‘ This is fantastic ! ’ he shouts back at the porter , now several floors below him . |
19 | They are sitting by the eye of the stream where it looks up at the sun before it weeps down the mountainside . |
20 | Minutes from the centre of Sant' Agata it looks out at the Bay of Naples and onwards to Mount Vesuvius . |
21 | 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 . |
22 | It sounds quite Jack Bruce-y in fact , with a pronounced ‘ honky ’ mid , which I actually quite like because it cuts through at a gig . ’ |
23 | He takes over at a time when latest figures show Gloucestershire with the fasting rising crime rate in the country . |
24 | ‘ Pity it stares out at a row of other houses . ’ |
25 | If you 're knitting with the mylar sheet , it moves on at the start of the second row and is scanned at the end of the second row . |
26 | ‘ With E-mail it zips through at a fraction of the cost , and such a system also eliminates many of the difficulties associated with operating in different time zones . ’ |
27 | Never mind that this is very seldom what happens when a bullet strikes a forehead and especially when it comes out at the back of the head . |
28 | it comes out at the beginning . |
29 | down and there 's a path goes along and it comes , it goes under the road bridge and it comes out at the foot bridge and it runs next to it |
30 | It comes in at the nerve-ends and is translated into chemical and electrical reactions . |